
(te 

Book---- 



NOTES, 



HISTORICAL, DESCRIPTIVE, AND PERSONAL, 



OF 



LIVERMORE, 



IN 



ANDROSCOGGIN (FORMERLY IN OXFORD) COUNTY, 



MAINE. 




vSi.>.«^ 7/ 



f- <i.«-^*i.«-»*-7-»*5 y-r 



Morals and happiness will always be nearest to perfection in small communities, where 
functionaries are appointed by as mimerous a body as can be brought together of the in- 
dustrious and intelligent. — Walter Savage Landor. 




PORTLAND: 

PUBLISHED BY BAILEY & NOYES. 

1874 






B. THURSTON & COMPANY, PRENTEKS, PORTLAND. 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER I. 
Early History, ........ 5 

CHAPTER II. 
Topography, Soil, and Productb, ..... 13 

CHAPTER III. 
Eakly Settlers and thelr Families, .... 15 

CHAPTER IV. 

Industrial Interests — Business — Course of Population, . 43 

CHAPTER V. 
Affairs Political, Municipal, and Military, ... 57 

CHAPTER VI. 
Matters Religious and Ecclesiastical, .... 64 

CHAPTER VII. 
Concerning Lawyers and Doctors, . . . . , 76 

CHAPTER VIII. 
Notes Miscellaneous, ....... 86 

CHAPTER IX. 
Contributions — Reminiscences, ...... 96 

CHAPTER X. 

The Story of Thomas Fish — 1782 — by Elizabeth Akebs Allen, 118 

Appendix, ......... 125 



CHAPTER r. 

EARLY HISTORY. 

The town of Livermore is in Androscoggin County, twenty miles 
north of Lewiston, fifty from Portlnnd, and twenty-five west of 
Augusta. Before the incorporation of Androscoggin it was in Ox- 
ford County. Tlie township previous to, and for some time after, its 
settlement was generally known as Port Royal, from the fict that it 
was granted for services rendered in the reduction of Port Royal, 
Nova Scotia, in the early part of the eighteenth century. 

Previous to January 15, 1735, many petitions were presented to 
the Great and General Court in Assembly for His Majesty's Prov- 
ince of Massachusetts Bay, in New England, by towns and individu- 
als for grants of land for services and losses in the French and 
Indian wars. Grants were made on certain conditions in response 
to these petitions. There were to be sixty proprietors, to each of 
whom, as well as to the first and second settled ministers and the 
schools, a lot was to be assigned. Among the petitions was that of 
Nathaniel Harris, Esq., to whom, with others, was granted township 
No. 2, "on the east side and next adjoining Connecticut River," as a 
gratuity for services in reducing Port Royal. The names of the 
original sixty proprietors are given, together vvitli the nunibei* of the 
lot assigned to each, three lots being left for ministers and schools. 
November 24, 1736, the Great and General Court authorized 
Nathaniel Harris to call the proprietors together, and he notified 
them to meet at the house of Isaac Baldwin, innholder, Friday, Jan- 
nary 28, 1737. A regular record of the proceedings of the proprietors 
was kept till November 1, 1743, when a meeting held at Weston was 
adjourned to the succeeding May on account of the " rumor of war with 
France, and the winter season approaching." There is no record of 
a later meeting till 1750, in which year there were three meetings, 
the last being held at the house of Mrs. Mary Leonard, innholder, 
Watertown, September 26th. No further entry is made till May 23, 
1770, when a meeting was held at Mr. Samuel Harrington's, in 
Waltham. At this meeting the question was put " to know the 
2 



6 HISTORY OF LIVERMOKE. 

minds of the proprietors if they would pursue their claim on the 
equity of Port Royul," and it was cariied. The same meeting chose 
a committee of thi-ee, consisting of jMaj. Livermore, Dr. Leonard 
Williams, and George Babcock, to petition the General Court to ob- 
tain another grant. 

The General Court, which assembled October 29, 1770, was peti- 
tioned accordingly, the petitioners setting out the facts in regard to 
the loss of title to township No. '2, by reason of its having been 
thrown into the State of New Hamjtshire by a survey which had 
been made subsequent to the oiiginal grant. June 11, 1771. the 
General Court ])assed a resolve granting the prayer of the j)etition- 
ers, and to the original grantees, their assigns or legal re])resenta- 
tives, their heirs and assigns, a township of the contents of six and 
three-quarters square miles, in some of the unappropriated lands in 
the Province of Massachusetts Bay, to the eastward of Saco River, 
and adjoining some former grant, on the condition that the propi'ie- 
tors settle sixty families in said town in seven years, build a house 
for the public worship of God, settle a learned Protestant minister- 
and lay out one sixty-fourth part for the first settled minister, one 
sixty-fourth part for the ministry, one sixty-fourth part for the use of 
schools, and one sixty-fouith part for the use of Harvard College. 
August 9, 1771, Samuel Livermore and Leonard Williams, by virtue 
of the powers of the grant, sent Elijah Livermore and Elisha IL'ir- 
rington on an exploring expedition to select the land, instructing 
them "to take a boat and pilot at Brunswick Falls and proceed up 
the river as far as Rocky-jNIico." A township of land lying on both 
sides of the Androscoggin River adjoining Sylvester township (now 
Turner) was selected. It contained 30,220 acies, the southeasterly 
portion of which was afterwards set off to the towns of Leeds and 
Wayne. 

Meetings of the proprietoi-s were thereafter held regularly. At a 
meeting at the house of Samuel Livermore, in Walthain, Jiiiie 17, 
1772, Lieut. Elijah Livermore, Caj)t. Ebenezer Learned, and Mr. 
Richard Woodward were chosen a committee to run the lines around 
the townshij) and divide the intervale on the west side of the river 
into sixty-one shares and lay out sixty-one one hundred acre lots on 
the west side of the river, viz., one for each proprietor, and one for 
the first settled minister. At a meeting held at the house of Samuel 
Livermore, in Waltham, November 11, 1772, the above committee 
made their report, but did not divide the intervale, it not being sufti- 



HISTORY OF LIVEUMOIIE. 7 

ciently extensive to be diviiled in conformity to instructions. They 
luid, however, run out lines of the town, and of sixty lots, being in 
their opinion the best in the town, lot No. 37 was allotted for public 
nse. They reported that there was a failure in the quantity of land, 
and a committee was appointed to present a petition for a further 
grant. It was voted to oi)en a horse-way to Sylvestertown and a 
cart-way to Pondtown (now Winthrop) ; but February 24, 1773, it 
was voted to make the former a cart-way also, and Elijah Livermore, 
Ebenezer Learned, aiul Thiomas Fish were ai)pointed to perform this 
service, and Avere instructed to have the above roads cleared by the 
last of October of that year. At a meeting held November 3, 1773, 
it being stated that Samuel Livermore, the moderator and a member 
of the prudential committee, was dead, and that Nathaniel Liver- 
more had resigned as a member of the prudential committee, Leon- 
ard Williams, Esq., Dea. Elijah Livermore (heretofore mentioned as 
Lieut. Livermore), and Mr. Elisha Harrington were chosen a com- 
mittee to "manage the prudentials of said proi)rietary." The ac- 
counts of Dea. Elijah Livermoi'e aiul Thomas Fish for clearing roads 
to the town were presented and allowed. That of the foruier was 
£40 10s. lid., of the latter £31 2s. 7d. Thomas Fish was appointed 
to prosecute trespassers, and a committee was appointed to lay out 
the remainder of the town. 

June 29, 1774, Leonard Williams, Elijah Livermore, and Elisha 
Harrington were made a committee to cause a saw and grist-mill to 
be erected in the township, A meeting was held October 12, 1774, 
and adjourned to May, 1775, concerning which the following entry 
appears on the records : 

"The distressing war with Great Britain breaking out April 19, 
1775, and all being obliged to resist the enemy, the place to which 
the meeting was adjourned being so near the theati-e of action pre- 
vented any meeting Avhatever." 

No meeting was held till January 17, 1779. It was in this year 
that Dea. Liveiinore came to Livermore and established his home 
therein. Mrs. Carvei-, Josiah Wyer, and EHsha Smith came about 
the same time. Josiah Norcross joined them soon afterwjn-ds. This 
first year was disturbed by the unfriendly attitude of the Indians at 
Roccomeco, but no actual harm was done by them, and the appre- 
hensions of tlie new settlers may have been occasioned by the do- 
mestic strifes that were raging among the natives, rather than by 



C HISTORY OF LIVERMOIIE. 

hostility to tlic wliites; for soon afterwards tlie Indians wore and 
ever continued to be in amicable relations with the settlei-s, and were 
frequent visitors at the house of Dea. Livennore. 

It was during this condition of affairs that an Indian judgment, 
combining justice and ])unis1inient, was recorded. An Indian at 
Roccomeco had killed another of the same tribe, Avho left a squaw 
of infirm health and a cri])ple. The murderer Avas arrested, tried by 
his tribe, found guilty, and sentenced to support and care for and 
wait upon the widow of the slain Indian so long as she should live. 
Vice-President Ilamlin has often heard his mother — a daughter of 
Dea, Livermore — say that she had many a time seen the Indian car- 
rying the woman on his back or hauling her on a hand sled. The 
last of the Ruccomeco Indians known in this section Avas Pierpole, 
Avho died at Lake Uuibagog more than half a century ago. 

Major Thomas Fish, before referred to, followed Dea. Livermore 
to the new settlement within a year or two. He was an officer in 
the Revolutionaiy war, and was a representative of one of the origi- 
nal proprietors of township No. 2 on the Connecticut River. He 
was a widower, but was engaged to be niarrietl to a young woman 
in Winthrop by the name of Betsey Marrow. Returning from a 
visit to her in January, 1782, he was overtaken by a severe snow 
storm and perished, near a large elm tree on the intervale at 
the foot of the hill, on the top of Avhich Dea. Livermore resided. 
His remains were taken to Winthrop and buried with military hon- 
ors. His lot was at the ])lace known as "Fish Meadow." 

August 29, 1781, a committee was appointed to confer Avith a 
committee of Phi])ps' Canada (now Jay), respecting building a mill 
to accommodate both townships. June 19, 1782, £60 and the mill 
lot (so called) and the island in the river against the same Avere 
granted to build a mill on the brook leading from Livermore and 
Stinchfield Ponds;* and p]Iijah Livermore Avas agreed with to erect 
the mill. 

September 4, 1793, it Avas voted to build a meeting-house fifty feet 
by forty on lot No. 36, 1st division, east end, and near the centre of 
the townshij^ north and south, and £50 Avas granted therefor. It 
was also A^oted to lay out a road from Turner to Phipps' Canada, 
from Dea. True's, over LovcAvell's Hill, and running between the 
ponds to the north line of the town. 

*Now known as Long and Round Ponds. 



HISTORY OF LI\rERMORE. V 

Tlie following entries among others appear on the records of the 
])ropnetors after the incorporation of the town: June, 1797, Gen. 
Hull, Esquire Badlew, Leonard Williams, Moses Stone, and Edward 
Hastings were appointed a committee to sell the individual lands, 
all or a part. June 20, 1799, the records say a meeting was called 
for this day, but that no person appeared. There is no record of any 
subsequent meeting. 

The fourth settler with a family was Lieut. Samuel Benjamin, in 
March, 1783. In 1789 the heads of families were Dea. Elijah Liver- 
more, William Carver, Elisha Smith, Samuel Benjamin, John Walk- 
er, Josiah Wyer, James Delano, Reuben Wing, John Monk, Otis 
Robinson, Cutting Clark, Ebenezer Fislier, Pelatiah Gibbs, Daniel 
Holman, Graves, Nathaniel Dailey, and Randall. 

The first male child born in town was a son of Josiah Norcross, 
and Avas named Elijali Livermore Norcross. The first female child. 
was Nancy, daughter of Josiah Wyer. Norcross ])robably resided 
on the northerly side of Lovewell's Hill, on the place afterwards 
owned by Sarson Chase. A deed from Dea. Livermore to Lieut. 
Samuel Benjamin, dated October 10, 1782, describes the land con- 
veyed as bounded " southerly on land owned by Josiah Norcross, 
easterly on Long Pond (so-called), northerly on the east division 
and another pond, westerly on said pond and lot No. 55." 



The town w^as incorporated by the legislature of Massachusetts 
by act passed February 28, 1795, and approved by Samuel Adams, 
governor. The meeting for organization was held at the house of 
Dea. Elijah Livermore, April 13, 1795, when Elisha Williams was 
chosen moderator; Samuel Ilillman, clerk and treasurer; David 
Learned, Sylvanus Boardman, and Pelatiah Gibbs, selectmen. A 
collector was chosen to "collect for eight pence on the pound." 
James Norton, Elisha Smith, William Lindsay, David Morse, Samu- 
el Sawin, Reuben Wing, and Abraham Fuller were elected survey- 
ors of roads; Thomas Chase, David Morse, and Elijah Stevens, 
surveyors of lumber; Ransom Norton, sealer of weights and meas- 
ures ; Thomas Chase and Isaac Lovewell, fence viewers ; Elijah 
Stevens and Abijah Monroe, hog reaves, and James Delano, pound 
keeper. On the tenth of the following August, Elisha Williams, 
Samuel Benjamin, and Ransom Norton were appointed a committee 
to divide the town into school districts. It was voted at this meet- 



10 



HISTOIIY OF LIVERMORE. 



iiig "to run the roads straight from one end to tlie other as the land 
will admit, witliout any regard to individuals." That this vote was 
literally complied witli will not probably be disputed by any one 
who has visited the town. 

At the first annual meeting held in the town for State ofiicers, 
April 4, 1796, all the votes cast, forty in number, were given for 
Increase Sumner for governor. At the meeting to choose an elector 
for president, vice-president, and a representative in congress, No- 
vember 7, 1797, "the inhabitants of twenty-one years of age and 
resident in the town for the space of one year next preceding, hav- 
ing a freehold estate within the town of the annual income of three 
pounds, or of any other estate of the value of sixty pounds," gave 
Stephen Longfellow, for elector, eighteen votes, and John K. Smith 
one vote ; fourteen votes, and all that were cast, were given for 
Peleg Wads worth for representative in congress. 

The question of a sei)aration of Maine from Massachusetts seems 
to have been mooted about this time, and at a town meeting held 
May 10, 1797, all the votes thrown (twenty-two) were for separation . 

The next year a vote was passed giving consent to a division of 
the town by which the " east side of the river would be set off into 
a town by itself." The town Avas finally divided and East Liver- 
more incorporated by the legislature of Maine in 1843. Dea. Elijah 
Livermore was the first representative from the town in the legisla- 
ture of the Commonwealth. He Avas elected unanimously May 9, 
1799. 

The town Avas fortunate in having for its founder a man so able 
and so Avise, of so much financial strength and Aveight of character 
as Dea. Livermore. He Avas truly the father of the toAvn, and his 
name is held in honor and veneration by its people. And he Avas 
fortunate in the character of the most of his associate proprietors 
and co-AVOrkers. 

Under the influence of such men the settlers, who AA'ere early at- 
tracted to the town, Avere generally men of good character and of 
some pecuniary ability. Few towns in the State probably owe more 
to the ch'aracter of the first settlers than this town. Many of them 
had been officers or soldiers in the Avar of the Revolution, and Avere 
active, earnest men, bent upon making their Avay in the world. The 
greater portion of them came from the neighborhood of Boston ; 
Cambridge, Watertown, and Waltham contributing the largest 
quotas ; a goodly number came from Martha's Vineyard, and many 



HISTOEY OF LIVERMORE. 



11 



from Worcester and Bristol counties. The settlers from the vicinity 
of Boston were familiar with gardening and fruit raising, and so it 
happened that at an early day the town became celebrated for the 
quantity and quality of its grafted fruit. From Bristol and Worces- 
ter counties came the men and women whose descendants have 
made the town known in the markets of the State and of Boston for 
its excellent cheese. 

It was understood that the materials for a pretty full account of 
the early history of the town had been collected, and perhaps pre- 
pared for publication, by the Hon. Elijah L. Hamlin, of Bangor. 
But it is to be regretted that no such history, or evidence of prepa- 
ration towards it, has been found among Mr. Hamlin's papers. The 
following letter from Dr. Henry Bond, of Philadelphia, to the late 
president of the Maine Historical Society, will be read in this con- 
nection with interest. Dr. Bond was an eminent physician and the 
author of The Genealogies and History of Watertown, an able and 
elaborate work. 

Philadelphia, May, 1858. 

William Willis, Esq. 

Dear Sir. — I spent my boyhood in Livermore, Maine, and lived a part of the 
time, between the death of the last of my parents and going abroad to pre- 
pare for entering college, in the family of Dea. Ehjah Livermore, the first set- 
tler and the chief proprietor of that town. Although I have been absent so 
long— now more than fifty years— I remember the place of my childhood with 
an affectionate interest and still entertain a grateful and most respectful re- 
membrance of the worthy deacon. He was the elder brother of the Hon. 
Samuel Livennore, chief justice and U. S. Senator of New Hampshire (as you 
may see in Watertown Family Memorials, p. 346, etc.). I have in the mean 
time frequently visited the scenes and the friends of my childhood, and I have 
of late repeatedly urged a venerable friend there to collect the materials for 
the history of that town before it is too late. This worthy friend, Dr. Benja- 
min Bradford, now on the shady side of seventy, has collected some materials, 
but he now feels so sensibly the infirmities of age that he is unable to pursue 
it. He informs me that the papers of Dea. Elijah Livennore have passed into 
the hands of his grandson, Hon. Elijah Livermore Hamlin, of Bangor. From 
what I remember of Dea. Livermore I should expect that his papers might be 
copious, throwing much light upon the planting and early history of that 
town. Mr. Hamhn is a native of Livermore and a man of liberal education, 
and having many of the materials in his hands I would hope that he will 
readily consent to furnish for your Historical Collections an account of the 
planting and the early history of Livermore. Dr. Bradford has told me that 
he will cheerfully render such aid as may be in his power. He has been town 
treasurer forty-five years ! This is remarkable in these times when rotation in 



12 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

office is so very generally prevalent, especially in the Northern States. My 
object at this time is to recommend to you to write, and invite, and urge 
Mr. Hamlin to prepare for you a history of Livermore. It is a good inland 
country town, furnishing no stirring incidents or illustrious characters to 
charm the world, but a paper might be prepared that would deserve a place in 
your Collections, and that would be perused with interest by many readers. 
Very respectfully yours, 

Henky Bond, 246 South 8th Street. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOKE. 13 



CHAPTER II. 

TOPOGRAPHY, SOIL, AND PRODUCTS. 

Situated upon the middle ground between the hills of Oxford 
and the rolling lands of Kennebec, the township partakes in about 
equal proportions of the characteristics of both. It has high hills 
like Hamlin's (or Mount Sier), Fuller's, and Waters' or Lovewell's, 
from which extensive views are obtained — grand, as the eye turns 
towards the White Mountains and the mountains of the northwest ; 
beautiful, as it rests upon the quiet landscapes that extend to the 
confines of Casco Bay on the south, and to the Megunticook Mount- 
ains, whose bases are washed by the waters of Penobscot Bay, on 
the southeast. 

The town, without being rough, is picturesque. It was when first 
settled heavily wooded, principally with pine, hemlock, maple, 
beech, birch, and oak. The original growth, however, has been 
nearly all cut off; but the ai'ea of second growth is rather increasing 
than diminishing. There are in the town many noble elms, and 
upon the farm formerly owned by Isaac Livermore there is, or was 
recently, a fine row of chestnut trees. 

While in large portions of the town the land is more or less 
rocky, there are considerable sections quite free from stones and 
where the soil is of a sandy loam, as in the immediate valley of the 
Androscoggin, and in the neighborhood of the village. The river in 
its course along the eastern boundary of the town is broken by falls 
or rapids in three places, to wit, at a point near the south line of 
Jay, at Roccomeco, and at the Rips, so called, in "Tollawalla." It 
has several fertile and beautiful islands, varying in size from five to 
twenty acres. At Strickland's Ferry (near the lower end of Tollawal- 
la) is a view of surpassing beauty, which has been photographed by 
Capt. George W. Brown, of Portland, who has taken several other 
views in the town, and with great success; among them that of the 
residence of Dea. Livermore, erected more than eighty years ago. 
He has also taken a photographic picture from a very fine oil paint- 



14 HISTOKY OF LIVERMORE. 

ing of the Norlands By his brother, H. B. Brown, the well-known 
Portland artist — especially distinguished as a marine painter — for 
Elihu B. Washbnrne, the American Minister to France. It has been 
forwarded to Paris, where it is greatly admired. The copy forms 
one of the illustrations of this volume. 

The soil is generally strong and productive, and there is scarcely 
an acre of what may be called waste land within the town. Requir- 
ing more labor in cultivation than the lands in the valleys of the 
Kennebec and Penobscot, it yields equal returns to the labor of the 
farmer. Apples and the products of the dairy are fanong the more 
noticeable sources of income, Avliile Indian corn and potatoes are 
crops which will average with those of other towns in this part 
of the State. In 1800 Rev, Paul Coffin, of whose visits to Liver- 
more mention will be made hereafter, says, " A Mr. Bemis raised 
two hundred bushels of rye, and his corn is believed to be five hun- 
dred bushels." He adds, "Dea. Livermore had a most thrifty and 
bearing orchard." In Mr. Coffin's journal for 1798, under date of 
September, he says, "Went to^Dea. Livermore's and put up at that 
good house. He and son have about fifty excellent cattle, many 
sheep, horses, and an orchard. Their house is large and high, of 
four rooms and two chimneys. They have four barns and many 
sheds." 

There are four ponds in the town. Round and Long in the north- 
erly part, and separated by a few rods only from each other ; Bart- 
lett's, near the centre, and Brettun's, in the southwesterly quarter of 
the town. There are several streams, none of them large, but two 
of them severally furnish a fair supply of water in ordinaiy seasons 
for grist and saw-mills, and (in their day) furnished, it for carding 
and clothing mills. There are, however, excellent powers on the 
westerly side of the Androscoggin River, one at Livermore Falls, 
and another a short distance above. These powers are as yet unem- 
ployed. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 15 



CHAPTER III. 

EARLY SETTLERS AND THEIR FAMILIES. 

The sketches of early settlers and their families, which can I>e 
given, must be brief, and limited, as a rule, to those who were in the 
town before the date of its incorporation. 

The first settler and principal proprietor of the town, and in 
whose honor it was named, Avas, as has been already stated, Elijah 
Livermore,* who was born in Waltham, Mass., March 4, 1730-1. 
He was the son of Samuel Livermore, a prominent citizen of that 
town, and who had for a long time (we are told in Bond's Genealo- 
gies) "the greatest share of the municipal business of the town." 
He was selectman from 1743 to 1764; representative from 1745 to 
1763, and town clerk and treasurer twenty-six years. Elijah was an 
elder brother of the Hon. Samuel Livermore, who was born 1732, 
and graduated at Nassau Hall in 1752, settled in Holderness, N, H., 
about 1780, and of whom Bond gives the following record: "He 
studied law with Judge Trowbridge and was made King's attorney- 
general for New Hampshire by Governor Wentworth in 1769. 
Soon after the breaking out of the Revolution he Avas made the 
State attorney-general; was several times delegate to the Conti- 
nental Congress, and was made chief justice of the State 1782 ; was 
member of the convention for adopting the Federal constitution, 
upon the adoption of which he was elected representative to con- 
gress ; at the end of two years he was elected United States sena- 
tor, which office he held nine years until he resigned in 1800." The 
Hon. Samuel Liverinore was the father of Edward St. Loe and 
Arthur Livermore, both of whom were judges of the supreme court 
of New Hampshire, and members of congress. 



*John Livermore, probably the ancestor of all the Llvermores in the United States, em- 
barked at Ipswich, England, for New England in April, 1634, then aged twenty-eight, in the 
Francis, John Cutting, master. He was admitted freeman May 6, 1635, and was in Watertowii 
as early as 1642. He was repeatedly a selectman and held other offices of trust. He was by 
trade a potter. His parentage has not been conclusively ascertained ; but there is reason to 
suppose that he came from Little Thurloe, county of Suffolk.— ^wu/'s Genealogies. 



16 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

Elijali Livermore inherited his father's homestead ; was a heuten- 
ant ill the militia of Massachusetts, and was chosen deacon of the 
Congregationalist Church in Waltham upon the death of his fother. 
He removed to Livermore in 1779, where he died August 5, 1808. 
Good sense, integrity, kindness, and a genial humor were traits 
which most distinctly marked his character. When he died he was 
mourned as a good mail and friend by the people of the town which 
he had planted with so much care and wisdom. The children of 
Deacon Livermore were as follows : Abtgail, b. November 20, 1758, 
d. 1817. She married Rev. Elisha Williams, a graduate of Yale 
College. Mr. Williams moved to Livermore about 1790 and Avas 
the first school-master in the town. About 1798 he became pastor 
of the Baptist Church in Brunswick. He died in Cambridge in 
1845. He had eleven children. A daughter, Sophia, married John 
Appleton, at one time a resident of Portland. William, b. Jan. 9, 
1763, d. in Louisiana in 1832. He was bred a merchant in Boston ; 
traded some time on Roccoineco Point in Jay (now Canton), 
and afterwards in Hallowell, and was a major of militia. Danforth 
P. Livermore and the wife of Col. Andrew Masters, of Hallowell, 
were his children. Hannah, b. Nov. 22, 1764, d. Jan., 1785. Isaac, 
b. May 7, 1768, d. Oct., 1820; was bred a merchant in Boston; was 
in trade a short time in Hallowell, Maine, and then settled in Liver- 
more as a firmer, and where he was a justice of the peace. His 
children were Hannah, b. 1796, d. 1886; Granville Putnam, b. 1798, 
now of St. Joseph, Missouri; Eliza, b. 1801 ; Elijah, b. 1804; Hora- 
tio Gates, b. 1807, a prominent citizen of San Francisco; Abigail 
Williams, Alma Louisa, and Julia Snow. Sarah, b. Dec. 7. 1770, 
married Robert Pierpont, of Roxbury, and d. Feb. 19, 1847. He lived 
on the old Livermore farm, and died Dec. 9, 1811, at the age of forty- 
two years. His children were Hannah, b. 1797, d. 1819; Robert, b. 
1798, a resident of Livermore; George Washington, b. Jan. 17, 1800, 
a resident of Livermore Falls; Elijah, b. 1803, d. 1818; Charles 
Henry, b. 1801, d. very suddenly at Memphis, Tenn., Oct. 6, 1850; 
John Murdock, b. 1808, d. 1818. Anna, b. April 6, 1775, married 
Dec. 14, 1797, Dr. Cyrus Hamlin, to Avhom reference Avill be made 
hereafter. Samuel, the youngest child, Avas born April 6, 1778, 
married Lura Chase, daughter of Thomas Chase. He died Nov. 
26, 1823. He was quite frequently a tOAvn officer, and at several 
times represented the toAvn in the Massachusetts legislature. Bet- 
sey, his oldest child, Avas b. in 1803, d. 1822 ; Emery, his only son, 



HISTOEY OF LIVERMOllE. 17 

was born Feb. 18, 1809, and after residing in Bangor for several 
years moved to St. Joseph, Mo.; Lura, the youngest chikl, born Oct. 
25, 1815, married Levi B. Young, of Livennore. 

Widow Carver was the second settler. She had seven 

children, William, Jcwies, Amos, and JVctt/tan, and three daughters, 
one of whom married Cutting Clark, one John Winter, and one was 
unmarried. The family was originally from Duxbury, and William 
settled in 1780 on the lot now occupied as a farm by George Gibbs, 
son of John Gibbs. Mrs. Carver made the first clearing and lived 
for a short time on the farm Avhere Col. Lewis Hunton now lives. 

JosiAH Wyer, the third settler and fifth with a family, Avas born 
in Watertown in 1749 and moved to Livermore, or Port Royal, as 
it was then called, in 1779. He married Rebecca Brackett, of Fal- 
mouth, Me., in 1782. He died July 7, 1827. He was a soldier in 
the Revolutionary war, an orderly sergeant, and was in the battle at 
Bunker Hill. He was buried with military honors. Mr. Wyer re- 
sided on the road leading towards North Turner Bridge from the 
old Methodist meeting-house, on the farm now occupied by Amos 
Beckler. His widow died June 18, 1836. Their children were 
Nancy, b. Oct. 1, 1786, who married Nathaniel Soper, and d. Sept. 
29, 1871. She was the first female child born in the town. Her 
husband, wdio survives her, came from Pembroke, Mass., in 1806. 
He is now (1874) eighty-seven years old. Isaac, b. May 28, 1788, 
d. in the East Indies. AVUliam, b. Mar. 30, 1790, mariied Lucy 
Baker, and d. in Livermore Dec. 30, 1858. He was a volunteer in 
the war of 1812, and his son Otis was a soldier in the war of the 
Rebellion. Betsey, b. April 30, 1791, married David Brickett. 
Sally, b. Sept. 7, 1792, married Thomas Haskell, d. in Livermore. 
Nathaniel, b. April 19, 1794, d. in Livermore. Ktbekah, b. Sept. 30, 
1795, married Job Haskell, d. in East Livermore. George, b. April 
2, 1800, d. in Livermore. Charles, b. Oct. 26, 1804, married Sopho- 
nia Shaw. 

Elisha Smith came from Martha's Vineyard about 1780, and pur- 
chased and lived on the lot afterwards owned by Rev. Thomas Wy- 
man. 



18 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

Samuel Benjamin* was born at Watertown, in the Province of 
]\Iass:it'liusetts U;iy, Feb. 5, 1753. At the breaking out of tlie 
difficulties witli tlie niotlier country, in the spring of 1775, he joined 
tlie company of Ca])tain Daniel Whiting, of which he was the first 
sergeant. He was at the combat of Lexington, on the ever-mem- 
orable morning of the 19th of April, 1775, where the first blood was 
shed in the great struggle for Independence. lie was also at the 
battle of Bunker Hill, on the 17th of June, 1775, and at Monmoutli, 
Yorktown, and many other battles of lesser note in the Revolution. 
His whole term of service was seven years, three months, and 
twenty-one thiys, and it is doubtful if there was any man in the 
Revolution who was in more battles, or saw more or harder service. 
The following dechiration of Lieutenant Benjamin, made for the 
pur})ose of obtaining a pension, contains a full statement of his ser- 
vice : 

"I, Samuel Benjamin, a resident citizen of the United States of 
America, an inhabitant of Livermore, in the County of Oxford, and 
State of Massachusetts, on oath declare, that from the battle of Lex- 
ington, April 19, 1775, in whicli I was engaged, I was in the Conti- 
nental service in the Revolutionary war, without ever leaving said 
service, even so much as one day, until the 6th day of August, a. d. 
1782. I served the eight montlis' service in 1775 at Cambridge, in 
said State; in 1776, as soon as the British left Boston, we marched 
to Ticonileroga, \^here my year's service expired ; and, on the 1st of 
January, 1777, I received from John Hancock, President of the Con- 
tinental Congress, an ensign's commission, which is hereunto an- 
nexed, and continued to serve under said commission in Captain 
Ebenezer CleavehuKl's company. Colonel Micliael Jackson's regi- 
ment, in the JMassachusetts line, in the army of the United Colonies, 
on the Continental establishments, until I received a commission of 
lieutenant, dated Oct. 7, 1777, under which commission I served in 
the same company abovesaid (which company was now, and had 
been some months previous, commanded by Captain Silas Pierce, in 
consequence of the resignation of said Captain Cleaveland) until th<^ 



*Mr. Benjamin was a descendant, in the fifth generation, of John Benjamin, who arrived in 
the ship Ijon, Sept. 16, 1C32, and was admitted freeman the subsequent November; was a pro- 
prietor of Candn'idge and perhaps first settled there. If so, it was only for a short time, as his 
house, with goods to the amount of £100, Wiis burnt in Watertown April 7, 1C3G. Gov. Win- 
throp designates him as " Mr. Benjamin," and in 1642 he had the largest homestall in Water- 
town. He died June 14, 1(H5.— Bond's Genealogies. 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 19 

6th day of August, a. d. 1782, when I had liberty to leave the ser- 
vice — a certificate of which, signed by Colonel Michael Jackson, is 
also hereunto annexed. My commission of lieutenant I sent to 
Washington last winter, and have it not in my power. I was in the 
battle at Lexington abovesaid before I engaged as a Continental 
soldier; and afterwards was in the battle of Monmouth, and at the 
taking of Cornwallis, and numerous other battles of less magnitude. 
I left the service at West Point, as will appear from the annexed 
certificate. Samuel Bexjamin.'' 

This is the certificate above referred to : 

"This may certify that Lieutenant Samuel B.iij.-imin, of the 
Eighth Massachusetts Regiment, has retired from present service, in 
consequence of a resolve of congress, passed the 23d of A])ril, 1782, 
and is thereby entitled to half pay during life, by a resolve of con- 
gress, passed the 3d and 21st of October, 1780. 

Given under my hand, in garrison. West Point, this 6th day of 
August, 1782. M. Jackson, 

Colonel Eighth Massachusetts Megimentr 

Lieutenant Benjamin was married to Tabitha Livermore, of Wal- 
tham, Mass., by the Rev. Jacob Cushing, pastor of the Church of 
Christ, in Waltham, on the 16th day of January, 1782. She was the 
sister of the venerable Nathaniel Livermore, who is now living 
(1858) in Cambridge, Mass., at the advanced age of eighty-three 
years; and was a relative of Dea. Elijah Livermore, the common an- 
cestor being Samuel Livermore, of Watertown, who died Dec. 5, 
1690. 

In the fall of 1782, Lieutenant Benjamin made a trip to the Dis- 
trict of Maine, for the purpose of selecting a location for his future 
home. On the lOtli day of October, 1782, he bought of Dea. Elijah 
Livermore, "of Liverton "* (now Liverniore), " Cumberland County, 
Massachusetts," a tract of about one hundred and twenty acres of 
land, bounded as follows: "Southerly on land owned by Josiah Nor- 
cross, easterly by Long Pond (so called), northerly on the last divis- 
ion and another pond, westerly on said pond and lot No. 55." 

On the next day, Benjamin executed a mortgage to Livermore of 
the said tract, to secure the payment of the consideration, viz. : 
twenty-five bushels of corn, and twenty-five bushels of rye, in twen- 



*This name, given to the township by Maj. Thomas Fish, did not jieniianently %\\\i\ hint that 
by whicli it had been generally known— Port Royal. 



20 HISTOEY OF LIVERMORE. 

ty-six months, and the same amount of corn and rye in three years 
and two months. The consideration expressed in the deed was 
thirty pounds. 

In October, 1796, Benjamin bouglit of Otis Robinson the property 
at Gibbs' Mills, now so called. In December, 1797, he bought part 
of lot 11, on the east side of the Androscoggin River (now East Liv- 
ennore), of Nathaniel Dailey; and in 1799 he bought the other part 
of the said lot from Daniel Stevens. He lived on this place until 
the time of his deatli, on the 14th day of April, 1824. He was the 
fourth settler, with a family, in the town of Livermore. He first oc- 
cupied a log cabin, built by Major Thomas Fish, a Revolutionary 
officer, at M'hat has ever since been known as the " Fish Meadow." 
This was in March, 1783. 

The remains of Lieutenant Benjamin were buried in the quiet lit- 
tle country burying-ground, on the western bank of the Androscog- 
gin River, at what is known as the "Intervale." He was buried 
with military honors, and a modest and appropriate monument 
marks his last resting place, upon which is the following inscription : 

" Tills monument is erected to the memory of Lieutenant Samuel Benja- 
min, who died April 14, 1824, in the seventy-first year of his age ; an officer of 
the American Eevolution, who fought in tlie sacred cause of his country and 
the rights of mankind, from the ever-memorable morning of the 19th of April, 
1775, to the surrender of Lord Cornwallis, at Yorktown, on the 19th day of 
October, 1781, and from tlience to the close of that sanguinary war, which es- 
tablished the freedom and independence of the United States, and gave to 
them a distinguished rank among the nations of the earth." 

The widow of Lieutenant Benjamin, born June 27, 1757, died 
June 20, 1837, at the residence of her son. Colonel Billy Benjamin, 
of Livermore. He left ten children, seven of whom are now (1858) 
living in Maine. 

The foregoing notice of Lieutenant Benjamin is copied from a 
pamphlet containing extracts from a journal which he kept while in 
the war. 

He was frequently in town office; was one of the selectmen from 
1801 to 1805, inclusive. His children were Billy, Samuel, Nathaniel, 
Betsey, Polly and Martha (twins), David, Charles, Elisha, Ruth. 
Bilhj^ b. March 13, 1785, d. March 31, 1849, was the second male 
child born in town. He married Phebe Wellington, whose family 
came from Lincoln, Mass. IL; was a man of military bearing and 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 21 

tastes, and was a colonel in the State railitia. His residence was on 
the Intervale. Samuel, b. Sept. 7, 1786, d. April 27, 1871, learnt a 
cabinet maker's trade and established the business in Winthrop. 
He married Olivia Metcalf, by wliom he had twelve children, of 
whom eight are now living. NatJianiel, b. May 16, 1788, d. Dec. 19, 
1867, married Betsey Chase, by whom lie had seven children, six 
of whom are living. Betsey, b. Dec. 29, 1790, married Samuel 
Morrison, of Livermore. She died Dec. 9, 1860. They had five 
children. Polly, b. Oct. 2, 1792, married Samuel Ames, of Liver- 
more. They had six children, of whom three are living in 1874. 
Mr. Ames moved to Sebec, in the County of Penobscot, now in 
Piscataquis County, before 1827. He went in a few years to Her- 
mon near Bangor, and was for one year a representative of the class, 
in which Hermon was embraced, in the State legislature. He died 
in Hermon April 7, 1862. He was born May 11, 1789. His widow 
survived him till March 6, 1865, when she died at the age of seventy- 
three years. 3Iartha (or Patty), twin of Polly, b. Oct. 4, 1792, mar- 
ried Israel Washburn, March 30, 1812, d. May 6, 1861. David, b. 
June 3, 1794, married Catherine Stanwood, of Brunswick, and re- 
sides on the "old Benjamin farm," and where once was Benjamin's 
Ferry. They have had five children, three of whom are living. 
Charles, b. Aug. 2, 1795, married Lucy Chase, and was a cabinet 
maker on the Intervale, in Livermore. He died May 10, 1834. She 
survived him several years. They left Betsey, who married John 
M. Benjamin, Esq., of Winthrop. Elisha, b. Oct. 10, 1797, went 
South and died in New Orleans, December, 1852, at the age of fifty- 
five years. JRuth married Jonathan Lovejoy. They had five chil- 
dren, one of whom — Samuel B. M. Lovejoy — was a lieutenant in 
the civil war. She was b. May 20, 1797, and d. Feb. 3, 1869. Two 
children survive her, Elisha B., whose home is in Livermore, and 
Charles B., a resident of Portland. 

Reuben Wing came from Harwich, Mass., and married a daughter 
of Elisha Smith. He died in 1861 on the farm on which he had 
lived for more than sixty-five years. He was a good man and much 
respected. 

Cutting Clark was a brother of Hannah Clark, Dea. Livermore's 
first wife. He lived on the northerly part of Fuller's Hill. He 

3 



22 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



came from Waltham soon after tlie settlement of Livermore. He 
was born Feb. 24, 1754, and lived to an advanced age. He was a 
man of fei'tile imagination, and a famous hunter in his day. His de- 
vice for preserving the lite of an Indian boy, who was with him on 
a hunting expedition, from the severity of the cold, is among the 
traditions of the town, and was at once unique and effective. 

Jabez Delano, Avho married Grace, daughter of Daniel Dailey, 
took up the Major Fish improvement at the Meadow, having pre- 
viously lived on the east side of the vive^; on the place now occupied 
by Col. Lewis Hunton, and also having tended for a time Den. Liver- 
more's grist-mill at the Falls. He was a man of religious emotions, 
subject to backslidings and renewals in matters of faith. His broth- 
er, Zebedee, planted himself on the fiirm afterwards owned and oc- 
cupied by Thomas Chase, and the same now owned by the town. 
He was a Baptist minister and m:)ved to Lebanon, York County. 
Another brother, James, settled on the farm now owned by David 
Rich. His sons, Calvin, Abel, and Leonard, settled in Livermore. 
With these was a fourth brother, Ebenezer, who lived in the west- 
erly part of the town, beyond the farm of Isaac Hamlin, and had a 
large family of boys — James, Jesse, John, Preston, William, Hufus, 
Lewis, and Levi; the daughters were Nancy, Hannah, and Iluldah. 
The Delanos came from Winthrop. 

John Walker, whose wife was a sister of Dea. Gibbs, was one of 
the first settlers, and lived where Gilbert Hathaway (who came from 
Freetown, Mass.,) afterwards lived and died. Walker was one of 
Arnold's men in the expedition by the Kennebec River to Quebec in 
1775. He was the father of Colonel Dexter Walker, and of Elijah, 
Levi, and Jin/us Walker. 

Daniel Dailey settled on the f:irm on the east side of the river, 
now owned by Col. Lewis Hunton. He was in town at a very early 
date. 

Nathaniel Dailey (son of Daniel) was among the first settlers 
in Livermore. He cleared the farm on the east side of the river 
afterwards owned by Lieut. Benjamin, and on which David Benja- 
min now lives. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 23 

Nezer Dailey (son of Daniel) settled on the west side of the 
river below the Falls. He owned, at one time, the mills built by 
Dea. Livermove at Brettun's ; sold them and moved onto a farm 
above North Turner Bridge. His son, Warren, lived in the same 
neighborhood, and had a stammering speech which, while it ob- 
structed, gave peculiar effect to his recitals of the successes and 
disasters associated with the "crow hunts" to which he gave 
much of his time. His flither had a second wife who, for some 
reason, failed to enjoy the devotional exercises of Iver husband, 
which Avere often tedious and always loud, but which she and her 
step-son, Warren, were enjoined to attend. As soon after Mr 
Dailey had commenced his morning prayer as was safe his wife 
would quietly leave the room. When this practice was discovered, 
the husband, to prevent her going out, locked the door; but the pre- 
caution was unavailing, for the wife escaped through the window. 
When the husband perceived liow completely the old lady had 
flanked him, his expressions of annoyance and vexation were scarce- 
ly in harmony with those which had so lately fallen from his lips, nor 
were they softened by the advice which his son took occasion to 
give him: "D-daddy," said Warren, "you should w-w-watch as 
well as pray." 

Pelatiah Gibbs came from Milford, Worcester County, before 
1789, and took up the farm where Ebenezer Hinds afterwards lived ; 
was often in town office, and was a deacon of the Baptist Church. 
He moved to Jay (now Canton). Capt. Jacob Gibbs, John Gibbs, 
and J^rank Gibbs, of Livermore, intelligent men and excellent citi- 
zens, were his sons. Capt, Gibbs had a large family of daughters. 
These families are well and honorably represented in the town at 
the present time, 

Abial Turner Avas born in Scituate, Mass,, and came to Liver- 
more to reside with his son John, He was a soldier in the Revolu- 
tionary war, Abial, John, and Fphraim, his sons, were early set- 
tlers in Livermore, John had a large family and died in Livermore. 

Elijah Fisher was born June 17, 1758, in Norton, Mass. He 
was in Livermore in 1789, and settled on a farm on the old highway 
adjoining, and south of, the Strickland farm. He was a soldier of 



24 HISTOEY OF LIVERMORE. 

excellent reputation in the war of the Revolution and was a member 
of " Washington's Life Guard," under Ca])t. Caleb Gibbs. At the 
age of seventeen, on his birthday, he was in the battle of Bunker 
Hill, and remained in the service for nearly six years. He received 
a pension for many years before his death, which occurred in Liver- 
more in January, 1842. He was a sincere and devoted Baptist. 
Dea. Fisher's wife was Jerusha Keene, of Taunton, Mass. She died 
in June, 1840. They had eight children, of whom Grivfll, b. 1795, 
;Salhj, b. 1798, Priscilla, b. 1801, and ^Salome, b. 1806, are (1874) 
living. 

David Learned came to Livermore about the year 1790. He 
was from Oxford, Mass., and a son of Gen. Ebenezer Learned, an of- 
ficer in the Revolutionary war. Gen. Ebenezer Learned was one of 
the proprietors of this town, in which David and a brother, Haines, 
had lots. David's lot was that now occupied by Capt. Otis Pray 
and Israel Washburn. Haines' lot was on the east side of the river. 
Haines was in Shay's rebellion, and did not come to Maine until sev- 
eral years after David. David was the first trader in town. Rev. 
Paul Cofiin, in his Missionary Journal for 1800, says that he sold 
goods that summer "to the amount of 1500.00." It was not far 
from this time that he built the saw-mill at the outlet of Bartlett's 
Pond. He was a brigadier-general in the Massachusetts Militia, and 
the first sheriiF of Oxford County, as his nearest neighbor. Dr. Ham- 
lin, was the first clerk of the courts for the county. At the election 
succeeding the incorpoi-ation of the town he was chosen one of the 
selectmen, and was a representative in the legislature in 1800 and 
1801. He sold the southerly part of the farm upon which he first 
settled to Col. Bartholomew Woodbury, of Sutton, Mass., and the 
northerly part to Dr. Cyrus Hamlin, and built on an adjoining lot a 
fine house, at the time remarkable as having the largest panes of 
window glass of any house in the county. When Artemas Leonard 
bouo-ht Dr. Hamlin's place in 1805, he (Leonard) removed the store 
which had been built by Gen. Learned to the spot near the Hamlin 
house, on which it stood till after 1830, and occupied it till 1809^ 
when he sold it to Israel Washburn. Gen. Learned died in 1811, 
ao-ed foi'ty-four years, on a voyage from New Orleans to Boston. 
He was an intelligent man and of easy manners. Mr. Cofiin, in the 
journal of his tour in 1798, has this entry : " Visited David 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 25 

Learned's family, and being unwell spent the day with this pleasant 
and serious couple; gave them instruction and Heramenway's ser- 
mon." 

Gen. Learned gave the name Oxford to the county upon its incor- 
poration, in honor of the town of his birtli. His widow, Mary 
(Hurd) Learned, died in Livermore, Jan. 14, 1863, at the advanced 
age of ninety-seven years and four months. She retained her focul- 
ties to the time of her death, and to the very last took a deep interest 
in the fortunes of the Union cause. Her ardent wish that she might 
live to see its triumph was not granted. Their children were Maria, 
Samuel, Charles D., and Eliza. 

Maria married Publius R. R. Pray, Avho had removed to Liver- 
more with his brothers, Ephraim and Otis, about 1810. He after- 
wards studied law in the State of New York with Hon. Samuel Nel- 
son, late Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States, and 
settled in Pearlington, Miss., where he became an eminent jurist. 
He was one of the Judges of the High Court of Errors and Appeals, 
and published the Revised Statutes of the State in 1836. He died 
Jan. 11, 1840. Samuel went South nearly half a century ago, and 
of his history little is known. Charles D. is a lawyer in Mississij^pi. 
Eliza died unmarried, in Livermore, June 17, 1870. Mrs. Learned 
had a brother (William Hurd) who made a firm and built a house 
at the head of Bartlett's Pond, but who remained in town only a 
few years. 

Thomas Chase moved to Livermore September, 1790. He was 
born in Tisbury (Martha's Vineyard) Sept. 30, 1755, died in Liver- 
more, April, 1844. He married Desire Luce, March 8, 1781. She 
died in 1851. In early life he was a sailor and was with John Paul 
Jones. He was an intelligent man and of the strictest integrity. A 
correspondent of the Bangor Whig visited Mr. Chase when the lat- 
ter was eighty-eight years of age. From his letter the following 
extract is made : " He delights to tell the history of his early life, 
to relate the story of his numerous adventures and sufferings. But 
it is when he comes to speak of Paul Jones and his daring exj^loits; 
when he is describing, it may be, the engagement between the Rich- 
ard and the Serapis, that his eye kindles and sparkles, and his voice, 
broken and almost inaudible before, becomes strong and clear, and 
he is ready to shoulder his crutch and show how ships were taken 
seventy years ago. 



26 HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 

The ontlines of his story, as near as I can recollect, are as follows : 
A privateer came to the Vineyard in the early days of the Revolu- 
tion for the purpose of engaging a number of men to go out cruising 
on the coast. Chase and about a dozen other young men joined the 
ship. After they had sailed they were, for the first time, informed 
that their destination was the coast of England. At this intelligence 
they were " a good deal struck up," though there were a fcAV Avho 
were not disjdeased with the idea of going abroad, and among this 
number was Chase, who had a love of adventure and a strong desire 
to see foreign countries. 

They had not been long on the English coast before they discov- 
ered a British man-of-war much too strong and powerful for them. 
As they were not discovered for some time they hoped to escape, 
but this hope was not fulfilled, and they were finally captured. In a 
few days the prisoners were put into another shii^, and were in three 
different ships in the course of four months, in one of which their 
sufferings were very great, it having on board over fourteen hundred 
souls — men, women, and children, French and Americans. The ship 
was foul, the prisoners were dirty, many were sick, and large num- 
bers died. At last the American prisoners were landed at Plymouth, 
England, and carried before two justices and a clerk and arraigned 
for treason. Witnesses were examined and they were told that 
they would be committed to " Mill Prison on suspicion of treason 
against his most Gracious Majesty, George the Third, and would 
there await their trial or his Majesty's most gracious pardon." They 
were committed to this famous (or infamous) })rison and kept there 
twenty-three months, during which time they underwent almost in- 
credible privations and sufferings. At the end of twenty-three 
months (two years and a quarter after they were made j^risoners) 
they were exchanged for British prisoners and sent to P'rance, and 
were landed at a small town about ten miles below Nantes. Here 
they found a recruiting ship and were persuaded to enlist for the 
purpose of filling the crews required for the squadron then fitting out 
at L'Orient for John Paul Jones. 

While on board ship at the latter place Mr. Chase saw John 
Adams. Mr. Adams was on the quarter deck in his morning gown, 
and was accompanied by his son, John Quincy Adams, then a boy 
ten or twelve years old. 

Chase was of the crew of the Alliance, Captain Landais. His ac- 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. ^l 

count of the engagement between the Bon Homme Richard, etc., 
and the Serapis and Countess of Scarborough agrees in the main 
with that given by Mr. Cooper, but differs in some respects. He 
will not allow that the Alliance deserved all the left-handed compli- 
ments paid to her by Cooper. According to Chase's account it was 
the Alliance and not the Pallas that disabled the Countess of Scar- 
borough ; that it was in consequence of the broadsides from the Al- 
liance that she struck ; that the Pallas, coming up, rendered valuable 
assistance and was left in charge of the prize while the Alliance 
went to the aid of Jones; and here, Mr. Chase says, she rendered 
good service, not to the enemy, as Mr. Cooper would have it, but to 
Jones. When Jones sailed alongside of the Serapis her commander 
hailed him, inquiring, " Who are you ? " Jones made no answer and 
the question was repeated, accompanied by the threat, "Tell me or 
I will fire into you." " I will tell you when I get a little nearer," 
roared Jones, in a voice that almost drowned the thunder of a dis- 
charge of broadsides which took place at that moment. 

Chase was afterwards under Jones several months and became 
quite well acquainted with him. He was a man of mechanical inge- 
nuity and an excellent worker in wood, and while at Mill Prison had 
beguiled many a weary hour in whittling out some very curious 
wooden ladles, one of which Jones happened to see after he came to 
command the Alliance, and it pleased him so much that he gave 
Chase half a guinea for it for a punch ladle. He then employed him 
as a cabin joiner. While Chase was in this service he saw a great 
deal of Jones and had the vanity to believe that he was quite a 
favorite. Mr. Chase represents that Jones was liked by his own 
crew, but not so much by that of the Alliance. The crew of the 
Alliance were greatly attached to one of their lieutenants, a Mr. 
Barclay, of Boston, with whom Jones had a falling out. Jones, says 
Mr. Chase, was a stern man, brave and impetuous ; a good man 
when the crew did well, the devil when they did not. He wanted 
things in their proper time and way and place, and would have them 
so. He had a voice like a cannon, but which in ordinary conversa- 
tion was "rather thick and grnm." He was of light complexion and 
something below the medium stature." 

Mr. Chase's children were as follows : Thomas Chase, Jr., b. Feb. 
22, 1782, who was a colonel of militia, delegate to the constitutional 
convention in 1819, and representative from Livermore in the legis- 



28 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



lature from 1820 to 1827. Thomas Chase, 3d, formerly a lawyer in 
Farmington, now a resident of Wasliington, D. C, father of Mrs. 
Elizabeth Akers Allen (Florence Percy), is his son. Lura,h. March 
11, 1784, married Samuel Livermore. Lathrop^ b. March 22, 1787, 
was a physician and settled in Vassalboro. James, b. Nov. 16, 1789, 
married Anna Pitts, both of whom are now living in this tOAvn. 
Bebecca, who married Tristram Tilton, was b. Sept. 20, 1792. Olive 
and Lydia (twins), b. Nov. 8, 1795. Olive was unmarried, and 
Lydia married Asa Barton. Lucy, who married Charles Benjamin, 
was b. Sept. 14, 1801, and d. November, 1844. 

Capt. Tristram Chase, a brother of Thomas, was a ship master. 
He settled on the westerly side of Long Pond, not far from his 
brother Sarson. He was lost at sea about the beginning of the cen- 
tury. His widow married Col. Jesse Stone. He left several chil- 
dren, of whom Charles T., now living, has been for many years a 
successful trader in Dixfield. A daughter, Betsey, married Nathaniel 
Benjamin. Ahby, another daughter, mai-ried Charles Barrell. 

Sylvester Norton, who moved from Edgarton, Martha's Vine- 
yard, in 1789, with his sons, Bansoni, James, and Zebulon, was a 
shoemaker, and will be referred to hereafter. He died Aug. 8, 1841, 
in the eighty-fifth year of his life. 

Ransom Norton lived near the corner, and was first a deacon in 
the Baptist Church and afterwards a clergyman. He died Oct. 25, 
1834, aged seventy-two. Susannah, his wife, died March 2, 1830. 
His sons, Jones, Jethro, and Charles, settled in the northerly part of 
the town. Jones and Jethro afterwards went to Massachusetts and 
died there. A son of the latter, Eugene L., has been Mayor of 
Charlestown and a member of the Senate of Massachusetts. He is 
a successful business man. John, another son, was a colonel in the 
civil war. , 

James Norton settled in the westerly part of the town, where he 
resided till his death in 1841. His sons were Moses, Ira, Tristram, 
and James; the daughters were Prudence, Patty, Lydia, Lucy, and 
Olive. He was one of the " four partners," so called. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



29 



Zebulon Norton", tlie youngest son of Sylvester, took up the 
fiirm situated on tlie road from North Livermore to the Falls, about 
three-quarters of a mile from the former place, upon Avhich he re- 
sided till his death in October, 18G5, at the age of eighty-ciglit years. 
He married, first. Hannah, daughter of Dea. Pelatiah Gibbs, and 
afterwards Mary Merritt. He had twelve children, of whom nine 
are now (1874) living, viz. : Sylvester,\>. June 12, 1804; 3Iary, b. 
April 5, 1810, now living at Dexter, Me., the widow of George, 
son of tlie late Capt. Alpheus Kendall ; David, b. Aug. 25, 1812, a 
prominent citizen of Oldtown ; Herman, b. Feb. 18, 1814, who resides 
in Quincy, Illinois; Sewall, b. Sept. 19, 1817, and lives on the "old 
farm;" Jane, h. July 14, 1822, the Avife of E. C. Brett, Esq., of 
Bangor, Clerk of the Judicial Courts for Penobscot County ; Lydla, 
b. Aug. 10, 1824, who married Henry Bond Bradford, of Livermore ; 
JEllen C, b. Aug. 2, 1828, who married John R. Brett, and lives in 
San Francisco; Hannah E., b. Dec. 1, 1837, wife of John Hathaway, 
who lives in Quincy, Cal. 

Mr. Norton was a selectman for many years, and was a man of 
strict integrity and great firmness of character; a man wdio could 
not only say "no" when duty or principle required, but who was 
not easily moved from his opinions. Once at a school meeting when 
his brother Ransom pleaded earnestly for the use of the scliool-house 
for the purpose of holding a religious meeting, and besought the 
voters to be accommodating and not stubborn and set up their own 
wills against their neighbors, "Uncle Zeb," as he was familiarly 
called, replied, " I had rather liave my own will than anybody else's 
will, and so had you, brother Ransom." The point against "brother 
Ransom," who was not unlike "Uncle Zeb" in the firmness with 
which he held his opinions, was thought to be peculiarly well taken. 

Samuel Hillman moved to Livermore in 1788, at the age of 
nineteen. He was one of the "four partners," so called, Sylvanus 
Boardman, Ransom and James Norton being the others. He mar- 
ried Jane Norton, sister of Ransom and James, and became a Meth- 
odist preacher. He died in Monmouth, Kennebec County, at the 
age of eighty years. He had seven children, of whom the Rev. A. 
P. Hillman, of Cape Elizabeth, is one. A younger brother, Moses, 
settled in Livermore, on the Intervale, in 1817, where he died Dec. 
17, 1823. Tristram Hillman, Esq., for whom Hillmau's Ferry is 



30 HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 

named, and who has held many municipal offices in town, is son of 
the last named. 

Samuel Sawin was born in Watertown May 8, 1762, was a sol- 
dier in the Revolution, married April 18, 1792, Martha Mason. He 
settled in Livermore about 1788. He lived near Mr. Thomas Cool- 
edge, senior, and like him was a grower of fine fruit. He frequented 
the Portland market for many years. He married for a second wife 
Sarah Webb, of Portland. His younger brother, Abijah, born Jan. 
15, 1764, married Prudence Adams Feb. 25, 1788, and settled in 
Livermore, not far from Samuel. Besides Samuel /Saioin, Jr., who 
resides at the Corner, none of the children of Samuel or Abijah are 
now in Livermore. 

Isaac Love well removed from Weston, Mass., and was in Liver- 
more before 1790. He purchased of Samuel Whiting the large farm 
on the northerly side of the hill known as Lovewell's (or Waters') 
hill on the old highway, and had one of the largest orchards, and 
with it one of the best cider mills, in town. He amassed a very 
considerable property for a new settlement, by farming, loaning 
money, and "putting out" neat stock and sheej) to "double in four 
years." He was a member of the Baptist Church and one of its 
most liberal benefactors, contributing generously to its support while 
living, and leaving it a handsome bequest at his death. He became 
quite deaf while comparatively a young man. He considered the 
State law in respect to the collection of debts as unreasonably prej- 
udicial to the creditor, and greatly inferior to the "old Monartcli 
laws," as he called the laws of the province. Though regarded by 
many as hard in his dealings, he did, under the constraint, it may 
be, of the good counsellor who drew his will, an act of justice such 
as men of kindlier fame have in similar cases omitted to do, in 
making adequate provision for the support, through life, of an old 
servant avIio, though of feeble intellect and ungraceful person, had 
been faithful and devoted to him and his family. 

Heney Bond, of Watertown, was born Jan. 14, 1762. He was a 
son of Col. William Bond, who was a lieutenant colonel and acted 
as colonel in the battle of Bunker Hill, and was colonel of the twen- 
ty-fifth regiment in the Continental army. He went with it in 1776 



HISTOEY OF LH^RMOEE. 31 

to New York, and tlience to Canada. He died Aug. 31, 1776, la- 
mented as an able officer and true patriot. His son Henry, the sub- 
ject of this notice, tlien fourteen years old, accompanied him to New 
York and Canada, and was with him at his decease. In June, 1790, 
the son moved to Livermore, where he had previously purchased 
land and half of the first grist and saw-mills erected in the town. 
He was a deacon of the first church, and the second school-master in 
the town. The first school-house in Livermore Avas built a short 
distance north of his mills (before mentioned as having been erected 
by Dea. Liveimore). He manied Hannah Stearns May 21, 1789, 
and died March 27, 1796, leaving two children, a son and a daugh- 
ter. Henry, the son, Avas born in Watertown, March 21, 1790, grad- 
uated at Dartmouth College in 1813, in which he was afterwards a 
tutor for nearly two years. He was educated as a physician, and re- 
ceived the degree of M. D. in 1817. He settled first at Concord, 
N. H., and then moved to Philadelphia, where he resided, devoted 
to his profession — in Avhich he became distinguished — till his death 
in May, 1859. He was never married. He was author of "Geneal- 
ogies of the Families and Descendants of the early settlers of 
Watertown, Mass., including Walthani and Weston, to which is ap- 
pended the early history of the town," published in 1855, a volume 
of near 1100 pages, the copyright of which he gave to the N. E. 
Genealogical and Historical Society. Hannah, the daughter, born 
in Livermore April 15, 1794, married William Dewey, of Augusta, 
Me., and died Nov. 24, 1827. The widow of Mr. Bond married, for 
a second husband, Zebedee Rose, of Livermore. 

*Thomas CoOLiDGE movcd from Cambridge, Mass., to Livermore 
in June, 1790, and had a large farm and excellent orchard of grafted 
truit in the westerly part of the town. He died in 1834 at the age 
of eighty. His widow, Lucy ( Wyeth) Coolidge, died Oct. 16, 1850, 
at the great age of ninety-six years and eight months. He had nine 
children. Jonas, the eldest, lived in Boston ; his daughter Eliza- 
beth married Hon. Peter Harvey. Daniel was one of the most 
wealthy and successful farmers in the town ; was a captain of caval- 

*The ancestor of the Coolidges of Watertown was John Coolidge, who was admitted a free- 
man May 25, 1636, and was a selectman many times between 1636 and 1677 ; was a representa- 
tive In 1658, and was often employed in witnessing wills, taking inventories, and settling 
estates. Mr. Somerby says " the Coolidge family seem to have been settled In Cambridge, 
England, from a very remote period." — Bond's Genealogies. 



32 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

ry. Major Elisha Coolidge, of Jay, is his son. Cornelius settled in 
Dexter, Me., where he liad a fine farm. Thomas was a farmer who 
grew much clioice fruit. He died in Livermore June 25, 1846. 
Elisha went to Solon, Somerset County, when a young man, and 
became a trader, amassing a large fortune. ITejyzibah, the only sur- 
vivor (1874) of this family, married Alden Chandler, and lives in 
Oxford, Me. Setsey married Artemas Learned, a trader in Liver- 
more, who moved to Hallowell and became a merchant and after- 
wards a banker. 

Joseph Coolidge and fmiily migrated from "VValtham in June, 
1790, in company with his relative, Thomas Coolidge. lie took up 
a farm near the line of Livermore in the part of Jay that is now 
Canton, but his associations were largely in the former town, Avhere 
several of his children settled. His father was killed, as Bond says, 
in the battle of Lexington, April 19, 1775 (but it was probably dur- 
ing the retreat from Concord), and he was himself a soldier in the 
war of the Revolution, having been a member (1780) of the four- 
teenth regiment of the Continental array. The privations which 
were fi-equently the lot of the early settlers of this neighborhood 
were illustrated in the experience of Mr. Coolidge. He relates that 
the year he moved into Jay there was a scarcity of provisions and, 
in consequence, much suiFering. His family was at one time desti- 
tute of food, and he went (believing it to be the only place where 
he could find any) to Dea. Livermore's. The deacon told him that 
he had no corn, and that the best he could do for him was to furnish 
him with a horse to ride to the Kennebec, Avliere it was understood ' 
corn might be purchased, and with money to pay for it. Thus 
armed, Mr. Coolidge set out for the down-east Egypt. Returning, 
with his corn on the horse's back, he reached the Androscoggin 
River late at night, but the boat was on the west side, and the ferry- 
man lived (at Dea. Livermore's) so far away that he could not raise 
him. At this moment a heavy shower came up, and Mr. Coolidge, 
tying his horse and removing the corn from his back, peeled a hem- 
lock tree, placed the bark over the corn, plunged into the river, 
swam it, found the boat, crossed with it, took his horse and corn 
aboard, recrossed the river, and proceeded on to his home, which he 
reached at two o'clock in the morning. Arrived at home wet and 
hungiy — for he had eaten little since the previous morning — he 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 33 

aroused his wife, and she made him a "Johnny cake," which he said 
was the sweetest food he ever ate. 

William Cooltdge, son of William, of Waltham, horn in that 
town Jan. 28, 1777, married in 1799 Mary, daugliter of iMajor Jona- 
than Hale, of Sutton, settled in Liverraore, was the first captain of 
the first company of militia therein, was a school-master and farmer, 
and lived on the farm afterwards owned and occupied by Amos 
Edes. He moved away about 1808. He was a relative of Thomas 
and Joseph. 

JdNATHAN GoDiNG, bom in Waltham Feb. 25, 1762, married Ruth 
Sargent, and moved to Livermoi-e in 1790, and had a farm north of 
the Corner, Avhere he planted a nursery and introduced many choice 
varieties of apples and pears. His children were Peter, who lived 
in Jay, Jonas and Sjoencer. wlio became farmers in Livermore, Han- 
nah and Benjamin Myrick. 

Abijah, John", and Abel Monroe, brothers, moved from Lincoln, 
Mass., about 1790, and settled in Livermore. 

Abijah Moxeoe was the first innkeeper in town, and his house 
was near what was known as Sanders' Corner. He died in 1823. 
He kept an excellent tavern, which travelers (of Avhom there were 
many in those days upon what was the great highway leading from 
Portland to Farmington), feeling sure of good fare, would lay their 
plans to reach whenever they could do so without too great an ef- 
fort. For years it was quite an exchange for the townspeople. 
The first four lawyers who successively practiced in the town lived 
with Mr. Monroe and had their office in his house. The neighbors 
and townsfolk would repair there to see one another, learn the news, 
relate what had happened, renew the past, revive the scenes and re- 
call the events and sayings of the war — in which numy of them had 
been actors — 

While jokes much sti-onger than their flip went round, 

though the flip was by no means intended for weak heads. Owing 
to failure in health Mr. Monroe lost the power of easy locomotion, 
and so was accustomed to sit in his large arm-chair in the j^^^blic 
room from morning till night, reading when there was no company 



34 HISTORY OF LIVERMOKE. 

Koine book, generally the Bible, with which he became so familiar as 
to be able to quote from any part of it with an accuracy that was 
scarcely less than marvellous. He delighted in theological discus- 
sion and allowed no opportunity for it to escape unimproved. He 
had a tilt with tlie Rev. Jabez Woodman, A. M., a Baptist clergy 
man of New Gloucester, which lasted from dinner to the small 
liours of the next day, and ended in the conversion of Mr. Wood- 
man to Mr. Monroe's way of thinking. He had not equal success 
with the Rev. Dr. Payson, by whom a discussion, which had sprung 
up between them, was rather abruptly terminated, leaving the good 
doctor minus a dinner, and the publican's money-till unrcplenished 
by the coin of the great preacher. 

Rev. Paul Coffin, in the recoi-d of a "missionary tour" in 1798, 
makes this entry : "Aug. 30th. . . Invited by the wife of Abijali 
Monroe to put up with them for the night. He had just sprung his 
net on six dozen pigeons and took them all. To take a whole flock 
is a common thing with him. Aug. 31st. . . Returned to Mon- 
roe's and put up for the night. He and his wife are sensible and 
agreeable." 

Mr. Coffin was in Liverraore again in 1800 and put up with Mon- 
roe, with whom he seems to have had quite an entertaining religious 
colloquy at the expense of the Baptists, who were multiplying in 
the town. 

John Monroe was a farmer and died in Livermore April 2, 1856, 
at the age of ninety-two years. Mary, his widow, died Nov. 1, 
1861, at the age of ninety-four. His son John^ a successful teacher 
in early life, and a member of the legislature in 1861, was a resident 
of the town until his death in 1873. Allen., his second son, lives in 
Milo, Piscataquis County, and the youngest son, Abijah, is a resi- 
dent of Richmond. Va. His daughter, Luda, married Rev. Caleb 
Fuller, a Methodist clergyman. She died many years ago. A 
daughter of Mrs. Fuller married Hon. E. K. Boyle, a prominent 
lawyer of Belfast. 

Abkl Monroe, born May 14, 1769, died June 24, 1861. He mar- 
ried Martha Bixby, of Keene, N. II., and for a second wife Salome 
Hinds, of Livermore. The Hon. Joseph S. Monroe (recently de- 
ceased), Senator and Judge of Probate for Piscataquis County, was 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



35 



his son. His oldest daughter, Patty., married Maj. Isaac Strickland, 
of Livermore, and died in 1873. Jitlia, the second daughter, mar- 
ried Elias T. Aldrich. She has been dead many years. 3Iary, the 
third daughter, lives in Keene, N. H., and Lttcy, the youngest 
daughter, in Boston. Isaac, the oldest son, was drowned in Bart- 
lett's Pond about 1820; the second son, Nathan, has been dead 
more than forty years. 

Sylvanus Boardman, who was a native of Martha's Vineyard, 
came to Livermore with Mr. Hillnian and the Nortons. He was an 
able minister of the Bai)tist denomination, of whom more will be 
said hereafter. 

P>HRAiM Child was born in Waltham July 26, 1760. He came 
to Livermore about 1794, and settled on the farm where his son 
Abijah lives. His first wife was Lydia Livermore, a sister of Lieut. 

Samuel Benjamin's wife. His second wife was Herrick. Mr. 

Child died in 1825. 

Benjamin Park lived near Abijah Monroe's and was the father- 
in-law of Mr. Monroe. He died in 1825, at the age of ninety-two 
years. 

Lieut. Samuel Foster was a soldier in the Revolutionary war 
and died in 1825, He lived on the east side of the liver. 

Samuel Atwood, the first captain of the company of cavalry or- 
ganized in Livermore in 1809, was born iti Dighton, Mass., and set- 
tled first at Brettun's Mills about 1795, and then in the westerly 
part of the town. He was an active, intelligent man, and was often 
employed as a town ofticer. Among his children were Captain 
JHezekiah Atwood, a prosperous farmer of Livermore, now recently 
deceased ; E2yhraim Atioood and Lorenzo Atwood, who removed to 
Buckfield, where they were engaged in trade for many years. /Sam- 
uel, another son, moved to Lexington, Somerset County. A daugh- 
ter, Hepzihah, married Artemas Cole, of Buckfield. 

Richard Merritt was a native of London and an employee in a 
large mercantile firm engaged in the American trade. He had seen 



36 HISTORY OF LIVEHMOEE. 

Boston merchants in London and became interested in their coun- 
try, and when he decided to emigrate to America brought from the 
London house a letter of commendation saying that he could be 
trusted with "untold gold." He married, in 1795, Mercy Coolidge, 
sister of Joseph Coolidge, who settled in Jay in 1790, and followed 
Mr. C. to that town in a few years; but he soon removed to Liver- 
more, where he lived until his death in 1826. His widow died in 
1840, aged eighty-six. He w^as in person a small man and of quaint 
manners. He had known in England, he said, men "who heard in 
their ears, understood in their elbows, and carried their brains in 
their shoes." 

Henry Grevy, a Hessian, after the close of the Revolutionary 
war, in which he had been a soldier in the British army, came to 
Livermore and settled on a fiirm east of Lieut. Benjamin's, about a 
mile from the river, and where he lived until his decease. He had 
two daughters who are now living in Bangor. He w^as a prudent, 
saving man and instructed his family to " eat their bread and smell 
of their cheese." 

Ebenezer Pitts, born in Taunton, Mass., in 1757, moved to Liv- 
ermore from Ward, Mass., in 1791, and entered upon and occupied 
till his death in April, 1831, a farm near the Corner, the same now 
occupied by his grand-son, Ebenezer Pitts. His wife was Mary 
Ellis, of Knynham. He was a good citizen. His son, Philip, and 
his daughters, Anna, who married James Chase, and Prudence, who 
married David Reed, settled in Livermore. Philip married Dinah, 
daughter of Sylvester Norton. He died in 1828. 

Major Joseph Mills Avas a half brother of Lieut. Samuel Benja- 
min and followed him to Livermore in a few years after the latter 
came here. He took up the farm afterwards owned by Capt. Satnu- 
el Atwood. When he sold this form to Capt. Atwood he bought 
and moved oflto the farm on Butter Hill, now owned by Daniel 
Briggs. He sold this place more than half a century ago and went 
to Pennsylvania. He had several children, and was a prosperous 
farmer. 

Lieut. Elijah Wellington, from Lincoln, Mass., settled at a 



HISTOIIY OF LIVERMORE. 



;7 



very early dnte on the east side of the river in Livermore. Elijah^ 
who is now living, Nathan^ who had the old farm, and Elhridge, a 
ITniversalist clergyman of Alton, Me. (recently deceased), and 
Phehe^ who married Col. Billy Cenjamin, were his children. 

Amos Livermoue, who married, first, Hannah Sanderson, and 
afterwards Eunice Luce, and after her death her sister, Phebe Luce, 
and was a brother of the wives of Snmuel Benjamin and Ephraim 
Child, was born in Waltham, June 3, 17G5, and died Sept. 15, 1826. 
He came to Livermore in 1795, and first lived on the farm afterwards 
owned by Spencer Godding. He had several children, of whom one 
only, Eunice^ the widow of Richard Merrill, is now living in this 
town. Her home is on the Intervale. 

Daniel Holman emigrated from Worcester County before 1793, 
and made a farm about a mile southwesterly from the Corner, which 
Ids son, Abner, afterwards owned and occupied. He was one of the 
seventeen original members of the first Baptist church in Livermore. 

Hastings Strickland, born in Nottingham, N. H., Aug. 17, 
1768, moved to Livermore in 1795. He was the son of the Rev. 
John Strickland, of Turner, a graduate of Yale College, and his wife 
was Sally Perley, daughter of the Rev. Samuel Perley, of Gray. 
She was born June 14, 1774. He had a large farm, with an exten- 
sive orchard and a cider mill, on the main road, about half a mile 
south of Monroe's tavern. Paul CoflSn visited him in 1797. He 
says: "Rev. Strickland kept Sabbath with us; baptized Isaac, child 
of Hastings Strickland, and Sally." Mr. Strickland died March 9, 
1829, and his widow Aug. 11, 1842. His children were John, Isaac, 
Samuel P., Hastings, and Lee. Jb/m, b. Sept, 10, 1794, d. in Liver- 
more Jan. 22, 1867. He was a successful farmer and frequently a 
town ofiicer. Lysander Strickland, of Bangor, and Lyman Strick- 
land, of Houlton, are his sons. Isaac, b, Dec. 17, 1796, resides at 
Livermore village and is a wealthy and prominent man in the town; 
was major of a battalion of cavalry, and for two years a State sena- 
tor. /Samuel P., b. June 25, 1801, has been a major-general in the 
State militia, a member of the executive council, and of both 
branches of the legislature. He resides in Bangor. Hastings Avas 
b. May 16, 1803. He was a major of cavalry, sheriff of Penobscot 
4 



38 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

County, and member of the executive council of the State and of tlie 
legislature from Bangor, in which city he resides. Lee, b. July 14, 
1806, was a colonel in the Maine militia. State senator, and county 
commissioner for Androscoggin County. He was colonel of the 
Eighth Regiment Maine Volunteers in the late civil -war. Colonel 
Strickland was a resident of Livermore and one of the directors of 
the Androscoggin Valley Railroad Company. He died in the 
autumn of 1873, leaving three sons, Drs. Isaac Strickland, of Ban- 
gor, and Charles L. Strickland, of Charlottetown, P. E. Island ; and 
Augustus Strickland, of Livermore. 

Nathaniel Pbrley, Esq., was a native of Gray, and a son of the 
Rev. Samuel Perley. He settled in the last century in the south 
part of the town, near the Turner line. He was a justice of the 
peace for many years. He died in 1844. Three of his children are 
living, Nathaivid^ in Illinois, Uhver, in Livermore, and 3Iaria, who 
married Samuel Fernald, also in Livermore. 

Simeon Howard moved from Sutton, Mass. He had a farm near 
the old Methodist meeting-house. It is now owned by Mrs. J. W. 
Bigelow. He was a thinfty man, and built a large house and exten- 
sive out-buildings. He died in 1840. 

Abeam, John, and Isaac Fuller came from Harwich, Mass., to 
Winthrop, and in 1795 moved to Livermore. Abram settled near 
the Ferry, on the east side of the river, where he lived many yeais, 
but about 1833 went to Lagrange, Penobscot County, where several 
of his sons had already gone. 

John owned the mills north of the Intervale, called Fuller's Mills. 
He died in Livermore, 1829, at the age of eighty-five. 

Isaac kept the Ferry at the Intervale for many years. He died 
March 28, 1851, eighty-two years old. He was a Revolutionary 
soldier. 

Capt. Peter Haines was born in Gilmanton, N. H., in 1766, and 
moved from Readlield in 1796 and settled on the east side of the 
Androscoggin River, where he had a large and good farm. He was 
a selectman of the town for several years and held many other of- 
fices. He died November, 1843. He raised a family of fourteen 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



39 



children, ten of whom are now living. His sister, Joanna, married 
Daniel Evans, father of the late Hon. George Evans, LL. D. The 
history of the family of Capt. Haines is more immediately connected, 
with that of East Liverniore, where his sons, Francis F.^ Sullivan^ 
and Columbus, now reside ; a daughter was the first wife of the Rev. 
George Bates. 

Asa Baktlett, a native of Holden, Mass., came from that town 
to Livermore before 1800. He lived on the farm on the northerly 
shore of Bartlett's Pond, now owned by Charles Fuller. He moved 
to Harmony, Piscataquis County, and died there in 1839. His wid- 
ow, Hannah fFuller) Bartlett, died in 1861. Of his children, Ozias, 
Nathan, Cyrus, and Cyrena are living. Ozias and Ci/rus in Harmo- 
ny, Nathan, in Livermore, and Ci/rena in Sidney, Kennebec County. 
The saw-mill built by Gen. Learned at the outlet of Bartlett's Pond 
was managed by Mr. Bartlett for many years. 

About the beginning of the century Col. Bartholomew Woodbury 
came from Sutton, and purchased the farm on which Capt. Otis 
Pray now lives. With him, or soon afterwards, came Thomas and 
David Rich. Col. Woodbury returned to Massachusetts after a resi- 
dence of a few years in Livermore, but the Piiches remained perma- 
nently and were excellent citizens. 

Jacob Bemis moved to Livermore from Sutton, Mass., very early 
in the present century. His wife, a sister of the late Simeon How- 
ard, is now living (on the farm Avhere her husband settled seventy 
years ago), at the great age of ninety-two years, in the enjoyment 
of good health. She reads the public journals and takes a lively in- 
terest in Avhat is going on in the world around her. Mr. Bemis died 
July 20, 1858. 

Jesse Kidder, from Oxford, Mass., was in Livermore as early as 
1802. He owned the fai"m now tlie property of John White, Esq., 
with whom his widow, in the one hundred and third year of her 
age, has her honae. 

John Bigelo^v moved from Worcester in the same year. His 
sons, Andrew, John Warren, IToioard, and Leander, were all good 
fiirmers and settled in the town. John Warren, born July 15, 1807, 



40 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

married Oscn, second diuigliter of Dr. Benjamin Bradford, and died 
Feb. 26, 1856. He Avas an intelligent, enterpiising man and a good 
citizen. He left sevei'al children. 

George Chandler was born in Duxbury, Mass., Sept. 6, 1782, 
and died in Liverniore, after a residence in it of nearly seventy 
years, Aug. 20, 1871. He was a quiet man, well informed, and of 
the stanehest integrity. He lived for many years on the farm now 
owned by James M. Ph'doon^ son of James Philoon, a native of 
the county of Armah, Ireland, who came to Liverniore in 1817 from 
Abington, Mass. The latter died in 1845. His widow, Christiania 
(Burrell), died in 1859. His third son, Gridley Thaxtei\ is a pros- 
perous farmer in Livermore. JoJin^ the second son, lives in Massa- 
chusetts. 

Ira Thompson was born at Middleboro, Mass., Aug. 3, 1780, and 
his wife, Sophia Drew, was born at Kingston, Mass., Oct. 15, 1782. 
He settled in Livermore in March, 1803, on one of the best farms in 
town, on which he resided until his death, Feb. 13, 1857. It was 
near the Corner, or North Livermore. His wife died June 29, 1856. 
They had eleven children, all of whom are living, viz.: Ira J9., a 
farmer in Livermore; Susan D.,^\\\o married Rev. Charles Miller; 
Elbrulgc (?., now of Foxcrolt ; Clarinda M., wife of John Monroe ; 
ylrac/, a prominent citizen of Bangor; Boadicea X.,* who married, 
first, Abner S. Aldrich, and afterwards George W. Pierpont; Eras- 
tus^ a shoe manufacturer in Hopkinton, Mass.; Ahhy S., who married 
the Hon. Joseph S. Monroe ; Job D., wlio lives on the old tarm ; 
Charles 0., a merchant of Chicago, and Mari/, wife of William 
Wyman, of Livermoi-e. 

Mr. Thompson was captain of the north militia company in 1816, 
and a representative in legislature in 1820. For more than thirty 
years he was a deacon of the First Baptist Church. 

Naphtali Coffin was born in Wiscasset, April 16, 1776, and 
came to Livermore in the summer of 1799. He owned the farm 
near the Fish Meadow where Capt. Hezekiah Atwood lived for 
many years. His children were William, Nancy, Stephen, Warren, 
Sally, Elhridge G., Louisa, Lorenzo H., Calvin, Angela, Charles 

*Boadicea died in the fall of 1873. 



HISTORY OF LIVEiniOllE. 41 

R., Abhy Vesta, twelve in all. He died at Livermore Falls Oct. 4, 
1870, one of the numerous comj)any of Livermore men and women 
who have passed the boundary of four score years and ten. 

Dea. Benjamix Tkue was a farmer and much respected. 

Col. Josiah Hobbs resided near the Turner line on a good farm. 
It was in the immediate neighborhood of Elder Norton's meeting- 
house. He was a well informed man, much respected, and not un- 
trequently in town office. 

Daniel Briggs had a productive farm on Butter Hill, the same 
once owned by Capt. Saj[uel Pumpelly. Pumpelly, or Pilley as 
he was familiarly called, was a man of strong mind and great mother 
wit; but lie suffered from a feeling, which prevailed to some extent 
among his acquaintances, that his principles were upon a lower plane 
than his natural gifts. When a boy, living in Turner (from which 
town he moved to Livermore and to which he afterwards returned) 
Dr. Dix and party, proprietors of the present town of Dixfield, ar- 
rived at Major Leavitt's inn en route to their township. They had 
traveled so far in carriages, but from the condition of the roads were 
here obliged to take saddles, and several were wanted. Pumpelly, 
a lad of a dozen years, passed the entire night m hunting for saddles 
and bringing them to the tavern, and his services were recognized 
by the doctor, as he was about to depart in the morning, by his 
placing in the boy's hand a piece of silver coin known in those days 
as a fourpence ha'penny, worth six and a quarter cents. Pilley 
eyed it sharply as the doctor moved away, when he called to him in 
a loud voice to " come back and get his change." 

For many years after the organization of the new county the ses- 
sions of tlie courts at Paris were largely attended, the custom being 
for everybody who could spare tlie time and afford the expense, to 
visit Paris court week. Pilley, who was a sort of pettifogger, was 
always in attendance. The throng of people was so great that the 
boarding houses were crowded with guests who, as a rule, were lodged 
two in a bed. But Pilley, who was of most exaggerated obesity, ob- 
structed this practice, so far as he was concerned himself, by sleeping 
without his shirt. Three hundred pounds avoirdupois, in this form, 
was not apt to attract a bed-fellow. Hiram Briggs, who married 
Bethia, daughter of Capt. Otis Pray, a good farmer, owns this farm. 



42 HISTOEY OF LIVERMOEE. 

Bexjamin Winslow, from Freetown, Bristol County, was here 
very early in this centur3\ He had a large farm between the Corner 
and the Jay line. 

Perez Ellis, from Raynham, in the same county, first settled on 
the farm near the Corner afterward owned and occu2)ied so long by 
Dea. Ira Thompson. 

Besides these there wei*e in town James TimherlaJce^ from Rayn- 
ham, farmer and teamster on the south road ; Capt. John Leavitt, 
from Rochester, Mass., farmer and drover and a prominent citizen ; 
Solomon Edes and Capt. Charles J. Baker, whose farms were near 
that of Mr. Bigelow ; Isaac Fuller, whose farm was on the souther- 
ly slope of Fuller's Hill and next adjoining that now oAvned by John 
Sanders ; Ichahod Boothhy, for many years a stage-driver between 
Portland and Boston, whose house was in the Perley neighborhood ; 
Thoynas and Hezekiah Bryant, whose farms Avere in the same 
neighborhood ; Isaac Hamlin, half brother of Dr. Cyrus, who lived 
under the shadow of Hamlin's Hill, or Mount Sier, as it was chris- 
tened by Thomas Coolridge, jr. ; Samuel Beals and David S. Whit- 
man, on the west road ; Elisha Chenery, whose house was above 
the Corner; Deacon John Elliot and William Thompson, who 
lived in the north part of the town; Rufus Hetoett, from Raynham, 
whose farm was on the south road; James Walker, a good firmer, 
on the road from the Corner to Hillman's Ferry, and others, to refer 
to whom would occui)y more space than the limits set to these notes 
will admit, who moved to this town and became residents therein in 
the earlier days of its history. 

Notices of other early settlers (and, in a few instances, fuller 
sketches of persons mentioned in this place) will be found in subse- 
quent chapters. Undoubtedly, many persons and families, of whom 
some record ought to be preserved, have been overlooked in the 
prepai-ation of these notes. For such omissions, want of recollection, 
and failure of persons who could do so to furnish the necessary in- 
formation, must be pleaded in explanation and excuse. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 43 



CHAPTER IV. 

INDUSTRIAL INTERESTS. BUSINESS. COURSE OF POPULATION. 

Tub leading interest .of this town, as of tlio great majority of the 
country towns in the State, is agriculture. There are in it many 
good farms and relatively few poor ones ; yet there are no great 
farms, none of extraordinary extent or productiveness, and no farm- 
ers of large wealth. There are, however, many farmers who are 
" well-to-do," and who, in earlier times, would have been called rich. ■ 
If there is not great wealth, there is but little poverty. The valua- 
tion of the town in 1870 was $524,260.00. This, in a population of 
less than 1,500, when the basis of such valuation is understood, and 
when it is remembered that this aggi*egate includes no overgrown 
estates, indicates a thriving and independent community — such a 
community as is the strength and hope of a country like ours. 

Of the facilities that have been provided, and the trades and oc- 
cupations that have been supplied, for the wants and convenience of 
the town, a brief account will now be given, with notices of some of 
the more prominent individuals who have been connected with 
them, so far as the space that can be spared for the purpose will per- 
mit. 

MILLS. 

The first mills in town were a saw-mill and grist-mill, erected by 
Dea. Livermore, as early, probably, as 1782 or 1783, near the outlet 
of Long Pond. The mills were afterwards known as Gibbs' mills. 
He sold them to Otis Robinson ; Robinson sold one-half to Henry 
Bond, who reconveyed to Robinson ; Robinson then sold the whole 
to Lieut. Samuel Benjamin; Benjamin sold to Nathaniel Dailey ; 
Dailey to James Parker; Parker to Eli Putnam; Putnam to 
Thomas Rich, and Rich to Jacob Gibbs, by whose name they have 
been known for half a century. 

Mills at the Falls, on the east side of the river, were erected two 



44 HISTOEY OF LIVEP.MORE. 

years afterwards by Dea. Liverniore and sold to Thomas Davis ; 
Davis sold them to William Chenery and Dwight Stone. A saw- 
mill, fulling-mill, and carding-mill were erected by John Fuller, 
above the Intervale, on the Gibbs' mills stream, in 1812, and subse- 
quently a grist-mill. A saw-mill was built by Gen. Learned, over 
seventy years ago, at the outlet of Bartlett's Pond. A fulling-mill 
and saw-mill were erected in 1804, by Joseph Horsley, on Bog 
Brook, a mile from its entrance into the stream that issues from 
Brettun's Pond. This mill attracted custom from a great distance. 
Mills were built by Dea. Livermore at the outlet of this pond. He 
sold them to Ca])t. Henry Sawtelle; Sawtelle sold them to Nezer 
Dailey, and Dailey to William H. Brettun, who owned them for 
many years. At this place, now known as Livermore Village, but 
formerly called "Brettun's Mills," are two saw-mills, a grist-mill, 
and other machinery moved by water power; and a large mill with 
steam power, which is used in various manufactures, has recently 
been built by Theodore Russell, a gentleman of enterprise and busi- 
ness activity. About 1830 there was considerable excitement in 
this neighborhood on the subject of hemp growing, and a large mill 
for the preparation of hemp for the market was built at the Falls, 
on the west side of the river, by F. F. Haines, Esq., and others. 
But owing to the exhausting effect of the crop upon the land, and 
the want of remunerative sales, the business was continued but a 
few years, and the mill was converted to other uses. There was, 
many years ago, a saw-mill in the north-west corner of the town, 
near the Canton line. 

CARPENTERS. 
David Morse Avas a carpenter and house joiner, but did several 
kinds of work beside. He was from Sherburne, Mass., and was 
among the early settlers in Livermore. He moved to Lexington, 
Somerset County, many years ago, where he was a justice of the 
peace. He was a man of great ingenuity. His tenns were "six 
shillings a day for joiner work, seven shillings for mason work, and 
eight shillings for mill work." Jonathan Morse, the blacksmith, was 
his brother. His residence was in the south part of the town, on 
the old main road, near his brother. Col. Elias Morse., also a car- 
penter, was his son. The place is now owned by Ira D. Thompson 
and Lysauder Fernald, There were carpenters and joiners in town 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



45 



before Mr, Morse, as there were several during his time, and have 
been many since. 

Before him were Thomas Wixg, who was, also, a mill-wrigOit, and 
Isaiah Keith. 

Ebexezer Hinds, Jr., came after him and did a good deal of 
wark here in the early jjart of the century. He was from Freetown, 
Mass., Avhere he was born Oct. 14, 1775, and arrived in Livermore in 
July, 1801. He had twelve children, viz.: Ebenezer, Salome, Gil- 
bert, Amy, Maria, Hannah, Leonard, Clarissa, Albert, Elbridge P., 
and Elbridge C, all of whom except Elbridge P., who died in in- 
fancy, are now (1873) living. He gave the first Republican vote 
cast in the town. 

Nathaniel Soper, Abnee Holman, and S^vmuel P. Holmax 
were much employed as carpenters and joiners, as was Obededom 
Brown, Avho possessed something of the humor of Artemus Ward, 
to whom he was uncle. In face, and particularly in expression, he 
bore a strong resemblance to Charles Dickens, the novelist. 

Samuel Boothby, from Woolwich, and Alfred Parker, who 
was born in Minot in 1788, were carpenters. Mr. Parker married 
Ruth Pray and had several children. He came to Livermore with 
his fathci-. who remained in town but a few years, in 1800. His 
residence is in the Gibbs' neighborhood. His son, Publius, was an 
artist of considerable repute. 

Zebedee Rose, from Dighton, Mass., who had at one period of his 
life followed the seas, was a carpenter. He was an early settler, and 
his home was in the neighborhood of Gibbs' Mills. He married the 
widow of Henry Bond and had five children, of whom Zebedee, 
George, and Charles are now residents of Livermore. 

Apollos Jones, from Taunton, who married a sister of Thomas 
Chase, the elder, and liad a family of fifteen children, was a carpen- 
ter and lived on the northerly slope of the Fuller Hill. 

Samuel Hersey, whose wife was a sister of Mrs. Isaac Livermore, 
was a carpenter. He moved from Roxbury. Several of his sons 
are living in this State. Simeo7i is a trader in Hallowell ; Isaac 
resides in Livermore, and his son, Artemas, who married a daughter 
of the late Hon. Jairus S. Keith, of Oxford, is a physician of good 
repute in that town. 



46 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE, 



MASONS. 

It has already been stated that David Morse worked sometimes as 
a mason, but this was not his trade or leading employment. Peter 
Humphrey, a native of Oxford, Mass., was the first mason by trade 
who resided in the town. He came about 1800 and died in a few 
years. He was a good workman, and first settled on "Butter Hill," 
and next cleared up the farm where George Chandler lived for many 
years. His son, John Humphrey^ a veiy intelligent and promising 
young man, Avho after his father's death went to live Avith his uncle, 
Jesse Kidder, was killed by the falling of a tree while at work in the 
woods about the year 1828. His widow long survived him. 

There have been quite a number of masons living in town since 
the death of Mr. Humphrey. 

BLACKSMITHS. 

Otis Robinson was the first blacksmith in town. He became 
owner of the mills as before related. He sold them, was ordained 
a Baptist clergyman, and moved to Shapleigh, York County, and 
from Shapleigh to Salisbury, N. H. Rev. Paul Coffin refers to him 
in his "missionary tour" in 1800. 

Capt. Jonathan Morse was among the earliest blacksmiths who 
came to Livermore. He seems to have been an old settler when Mr. 
Coflin first visited the town. He pi'eached at his house and em- 
ployed him in the line of his trade; he speaks of him as "my friend 
Morse, the excellent blacksmith." He had great celebrity as a 
shoer of horses and oxen. His first wife was killed by the fall of 
his brother's house Aug. 15, 1799. In the summer of 1824 he was 
thrown from his wagon, near the store of Mr. Washburn, and both 
his legs were broken. He came from Sherburne, Mass., and died 
Oct. 30, 1848. 

David Read, of Attleborough, Mass., was in Livermore in 1793, 
^nd in that year assisted in the organization of the first Baptist 
Church. He was a blacksmith and had a shop at the Corner. He 
died in Livermore in April, 1870, at the age of ninety-four. Mr. 
Read, soon after Dr. Hamlin came to Livermore, pursued, under his 
instruction, for some time, the study of medicine ; but, notwith- 
standing a strong predilection for this profession, he finally aban- 
doned the purpose of making this profession his life employment, and 
returned to his trade as a blacksmith, which he followed until the 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 47 

infirmities of age compelled him to give it up. Stillman Jiead, a 
much respected citizen, and recently a trader at the Falls, is his son. 

Dea. William Sanders had a blacksmith's shop in the southerly- 
part of the town, but he moved to Gibbs' Mills and worked at his 
trade there for many years. 

Nathan Bartlett, son of Asa, has been engaged in the trade of 
a blacksmith, at his shop near Sander's Corner, for half a century. 

Jeremiah Bean was a well-known blacksmith at the Corner forty 
years ago. 

James H. Putnam was a blacksmith, largely employed by Sarson 
Chase, jr., the carriage and sleigh maker, whose shop was near the 
old Learned mangion. 

Ebenezer Pray, a brother of Capt. Otis Pray, carried on this 
trade for a few years in the shop that had been occupied by Putnam. 
He removed to Worcester, Mass., a quarter of a century ago. 

TAN^NERS. 

CoL. Jesse Stone was very early in Livermore and carried on the 
business of tanning at North Livermore, where also he kept for 
many years a tavern. He came from Ward, Mass.; was boim Nov. 
11, 1765, and died Feb. 28, 1857. He was a selectman as early as 
1802 and frequently afterwards; was a justice of the peace and 
postmaster at the North Livermore office. Of his sons, Dwight^ 
William, and Mattheio Merry are living. William was a graduate 
of Bowdoin College and studied law in Hallowell with the Hon. 
Peleg Sprague, commenced business at West Prospect (now Sears- 
port), and then moved to the State of Mississippi. Dwight resides 
in Massachusetts, and Matthew M. at Livermore Falls. 

Captain Alpheus Kendall (recently deceased at Dexter, Me.,) 
built the second tannery in toAvn. It was near the outlet of Bart- 
lett's Pond. He was an excellent workman, and a high-toned man. 
He was captain of the Livermore company of cavalry. His only 
surviving son, Stedman, lives in Dexter. 

John Smith moved from Brentwood, N, H., in 1816, and estab- 
lished himself on the west side of the river, near the Falls, as a 
tanner. The business has been large and profitable. Mr. Smith's 
wife, Mary Sanborn, died in November, 1869. He is a man of en- 
terprise and was greatly instrumental in eifecting the construction 
of the Androscoggin Railroad. 



48 HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 

Caleb Smith, son of the former, carries on the tanning business 
in the old yard of liis father, and like his father is a useful and enter- 
prising citizen. He is the present representative of Livermore in 
the State legislature. 

SADDLER. 
Capt. Simeon Waters, a native of Sutton, Mass., was by trade a 
saddler. He settled in Livermore March 16, 1802, and commenced 
work at his trade. He soon became a farmer, also, and provided 
himself with one of the largest and best farms in the town, situated 
on the southerly side of the hill which has been known sometimes 
as Lovewell's, sometimes as Waters', Hill. He was the second capt- 
ain of the Livermore company of cavalry ; was elected a representa- 
tive from Livermore in the legislature of Massachusetts in 1806, 
1808, 1809, 1810, 1812, 1814, 1815, 1816, and 1818. He served fre- 
quently as a town officer. He survived his wife (Betsey Marble) 
many years, dying March 27, 1866, aged ninety-four years and ten 
months. His surviving children are Clarendon^ who lives on the old 
farm ; Brooksa and Almira, who reside in Livermore, on the old 
Learned place ; CoA?t/«a, who married Rev. Peter Hassinger, and is 
settled in Abington, Illinois; Abigail, wife of Bela T. Bicknell, of 
Bath, Me.; Simeon, who lives in Kansas, and Emeretta, a teacher in 
St. Louis, Mo. 

SHOEMAKERS. 

Sylvester Norton and Dea. Sarson Chase were among tlie 
first shoemakers in town. Norton's shop was near the Corner, and 
Chase had a shop on his farm, on the northerly slope of Lovewell's 
Hill. Mr. Chase's children were Jane, who married Isaac Haskell, 
of New Gloucester; BlayJiew* who was a shoemaker and now lives 
at the Falls; /b'arsow, now employed at the navy yard in Charles- 
town, and Mary, who married Charles Howar(L 

John Sanders, whose shop was near Monroe's, was a man of 
great capacity for doing work. Of his children now living Joh7i is a 
prosperous farmer and owns the large farm formerly held by Capt. 
Daniel Coolidge ; Emeline married William Poole and lives on the 
Capt. Baker farm in Livermore. Ira Towle worked with Sanders. 

*Mr. Chase died February, 1874. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



49 



Samuel Harmon and Thomas Lord, a pensioner of the wnr of 181'i, 
were in this business. It is now carried on quite extensively for tlie 
trade at tlie village. Sumner Soule & Co. em})l<)y in it (1873) one 
hundred hands, and S. V. Young twenty. 

MILL-WEIGHTS. 

Thomas Wing was the first mill-wright in town and lived at 
Brettun's Mills. 

Ephratm and Otis Pray came from Oxford, Mass., in 1810, and 
were extensively engaged as mill-wrights in Livermore and the 
neighboring towns, and were superior workmen. Their brother, 
Publius R. R., was an apprentice with them a short time. Otis was 
a captain of the Livermore cavalry company, and became a farmer. 
He is now living at a ripe old age on the farm which he has occu- 
pied for more than sixty years.* He married Bethia Weeks, of Wayne, 
and after her decease, her sister, Eliza Weeks, who survives hira. His 
son, Albert C Pray^ who was in the civil war and has been a repre- 
sentative to the State legislature, lives on the same farm. Another 
son, Otis Arktoright, is a successful business man in Minneapolis. 
His brother, Ephraim, died many years ago. A daughter, Bosetta, 
married Chandler, and lives in Bridgwater, Me. BnmUa^Xhc second 
daughter, married Getchell, and lives in Minnesota, and Betlda^ the 
youngest, is the wife of Hiram Briggs, of Livermore. 

CABLSTET MAKERS. 
The earliest cabinet makers w^ere probably Thomas Chase and 
Samuel Boothby who, however, were carpenters and f irmers also. 
Charles Benjamin was a cabinet maker early in the present cen- 
tury, doing excellent work at his shop on the Intervale. 

CAERIAGE AND SLEIGH MAKERS. 
Sarson Chase, jr., was engaged for many years previous to 18S0 
in the carriage and sleigh making business. He had fine tnste, and 
his carriages and sleighs were among the best that were made in his 
time in the State. His sleighs were in demand from Portland to 
Bangor. He is now employed at the naA^y yard in Charlestown, 
Mass. Bela T. Bicknell, now of Bath, carried on the business 
successfully for several years at the shop previously occupied by Mr. 
Chase. 

*Capt. Pray died March C, 1874, aged eighty-five years and twelve days. 



^^ HrSTOllY OF LIVEr.MORE. 

SCYTHE AND SNEATH MAKERS. 
Before tlie division of the town, Samuel Park carried on the 
business of scytlie making for several years at the Falls. 

Ueney Aldrich, at Brettun's Mills, M-as engaged in the manu- 
facture of scythe sncaths. Mr. Aldrich came from Uxbridge, Mass., 
in 1808. He died on Long Island, N. Y., in 1846. Plis wife, Nancy 
Stanley, of Swansey, N. H., died in Mobile in 1865. Ilis children 
wereiVms T.,h. in 1809, d. at Memphis, Tenn., October, 1850; 
Abner S., b. in 1811, d. in New York, 1848; A^igela, who married 
Barzillai Latham, b. in 1813, d. in 1864; EUzaheth, who married 
WilliamCutts, d. in 1844; Bwiiel.h. in 1817, now living in New 
OHeans, and Ncmcy, b. in 1819, d. in New York, 1843. Elias T. 
was a merchnnt in Bnngor, where he erected the fine residence 
which, nfier he removed from that city, was owned by the late John 
Barker, Esq. He died suddenly at Memphis, Tenn., some twenty- 
five years ago. His friend and com])anion, Charles H. Pierpont, 
died at the same time. Seth Ballou, a relative of Mi'. Aldrich' 
was much in his employment. 

CLOCK MAKER. 
KiLAH Hall, who worked at the trade of clock making, lived in 
the southerly part of the town. He was a native of Raynham. 
His son, Amasa, was a watch maker and jeweller in the South and 
at Lewiston. 

CLOTHIERS AND CARDERS. 

Tlie first pi-ol)ably to do business as a clothier or carder in town 
was Joseph Houslev. It was aliout the oi)ening of the century that 
lie built mills for these trades. They were on Bog Brook, near the 
residence of his brother, James Horsley. Mr. H. married a daugh- 
ter of Benjamin Parks, and had Christopher Cohimbus, the prince 
of fiddlers in all the country side; Leonora, a beautiful girl, who 
married John A. Pitts, of Winthrop, who afterwards moved to 
C^hicago, and Myrtilla, who died unmarried. 

John Fuller and Joiix A. Kimuall, at Fuller's Mills, were en- 
gaged in this trade for several years. 

James Hanxa, an excellent workman and intelligent man, a na- 
tive of the north of Ireland, was in this business at the village for a 
considerable period. But before him was Ozias Bartle?t, who 
moved to Harmony, Somerset County, nearly fifty years ago. 



HISTORY OF LIYERMORE. 



51 



There was a fulling mill and carding machine at the Falls from an 
early day. 

TRADERS. 

Gen. Learned, as has been already stated, was the first trader, or 
storekeeper, in town. After hira was Aetemas Leonard, who oc- 
cu))ied the Learned store, having removed it to the lot purchased of 
Dr. Hamlin. Leonard was a native of Raynham, Mass., and opened 
his store in Livermore in 1805. He married Betsey, daughter of 
Thomas Coolidge, by whom he had three children. He did a large 
business for a new town in the country. In 1809 he sold his farm 
and store to Israel Washburn and moved to llallowell. 

William H. Brettun, born in Raynham, Mass., March '21, 1773, 
moved to Livermore in 1804, and owned and occupied a large farm 
on the main road, about a mile from tlie north line of Turner, where 
he had a productive orchard and a store. About the year 1810 he 
pui'chased the mills and water power at the village (for a long time 
known as " Brettun's Mills " ) and there carried on for many years 
grist and saw-mills, shingle and clapboard machines, carding and 
fulling-mills, and a pot-ash. He also had a store from which were 
sold large quantities of goods. He was successful in accumulating 
property. In 1835 he sold his estates in Livermore and moved soon 
afterwards to Bangor, where he died Sept. 10, 1837. In the early 
part of the century he was a good deal in town office, and several 
times a representative in the legislature of Massachusetts. His wife 
(to whom he was married May 15, 1796,) was Anna Sarah Leonard, 
a sister of Artemas Leonard. She died Sept. 22, 1847. WilUant 
7/! ^rei^icn, Jr., his eldest son, married, October, 1824, Elizabeth A. 
Williams, of Taitnton, and settled in Livermore and continued in 
trade there after his father's removal. He mariied for his second 
wife Deborah Washburn, widow of Davis Washburn, and sister of 
his first Avife. He died Feb.. 19,' 1864. Another son, Seranns X., re- 
sides in Hampton, Illinois. His eldest daughter, (larinda, married 
Maj. Hastings Strickland, formerly of Livermore, but now of Ban- 
gor. Hannah^ the second daughter, married Hon. James T. Leav- 
itt, of Skowhegan, and has been dead many years. Amanda, the 
youngest daughter, died unmarried. 

Israel Washburn was born in Raynham, Mass., Nov. 18, 1784. 
He came to Maine in 1806, visiting Bangor, Eddington, Mariaville, 
Trenton, and Livermore. He remained some months at the latter 



52 HISTOKY OF LIVEEMOKE. 

l)lacc, and tlicn went to the County of Lincoln, where he was em- 
]»k)ye»l for a year or more as a scliool teacher, and after this engaged 
in trade and sliip building witli Barzilhii Wliite, at White's Land- 
ing, now Richmond, on the Kennebec River. In 1809, l)aving pur- 
chased of Artemas Leonard his farm, store, and goods in Livermore, 
lie commenced business here as a trader, in which he remained until 
1829. His subsequent years ha\'e been passed upon his farm, known 
as the '^ Norlands," where he now lives (1873) at the advanced age 
of eighty-nine years. During the earlier part of his i-esidence in 
this town he was much of the time in office as town clerk and select- 
man, and was a representative in the legislature of Massachusetts in 
1815, 1816, 1818, and 1819. He married Martha Benjamin, of Liv- 
ermore, March 30, 1812. She died May 6, 1861. They had eleven 
children, of whom nine are now living. Israel (LL. D.) was edu- 
cated for the bar, and settled at Orono, Penobscot County, Decem- 
er, 1834. He continued in the practice of his profession, so far as 
the discharge of official duties would permit, until about 1860. He 
was a member of the State legislature in 1842, and a re]»resentativo 
from the Penobscot District in the thirty-second, thirty-third, tliirty- 
fouilh, thirty-fifth, and thirty-sixth congresses of the United States. 
He resigned his seat in Congress January 1, 1861, to enter upon the 
duties of the office of goveinor of the State, having been elected 
thereto the previous autumn. He was re-elected in September, 
1861, and declined a subsequent election. In November, 1863, 
he was appointed by President Lincoln collector of the port of 
Portland, and has held that office to the present time (1873). He 
is j)resident of the board of trustees of Tufts College. Alger- 
tion /S. Avas a merchant in Boston, and afterwards a banker in 
Hallowell, where he now lives. Elihu B. studied law in Boston 
and at the Harvard Law School ; went to Illinois in 1840 and com- 
menced practice with Charles S. Hempstead, Esq., at Galena. In 
1852 he was elected representative in congress and was continued in 
this -office, by subsequent elections, till March, 1869, being at the 
time of his retirement the oldest member by consecutive elections, 
or, in congressional parlance, "the Father of the House." In March, 
1869, he was appointed by President Grant Secretary of State, but 
soon afterwards resigned that position to accept the office of Minis- 
ter Plenipotentiary to France. He was in Paris as Minister during 
the seige by the Prussians and the reign of the Commune. Cad- 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



63 



v:alader C. (LL. D.) was a lawyer, and settled in Mineral Point, 
Wisconsin, about 1841. lie now lives in Madison in that State. 
He was a member of the thirty-fourth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, 
thirty-ninth, and fortietli congresses ; was a major-general of volun- 
teers in the late civil war, serving principally in the valley of the 
lower Mississippi and in Texas. In November, 1871, he was elected 
Governor of Wisconsin. Martha married Col. Charles L. Stephen- 
son, a native of Gorham, Me., and lives in Galena, 111. Charles A. 
was in Washington, D. C, a short time after leaving college (Bow- 
doin) in 1848, and went to California where he became a newspaper 
publisher and editor. He was an elector at large from that State in 
1860; and in 1861 was appointed Minister Resident to Paraguay. 
He was recalled at his own request in 1869, and is now a resident ot 
Oakland, Cal. He is author of a History of Paraguay, an elaborate 
work in two large volumes, and of several other works. Samuel B 
was a shipmaster in the merchant marine, and afterwards was in the 
lumber trade in Wisconsin and Minnesota. He was a captain in the 
volunteer force in the navy in the late civil war. He now resides at 
the Norlands. Mary B. (deceased) married Gustavus A. Buffum, of 
Clinton, Iowa. William I), graduated at Bowdoin College in 1854' 
studied law and was admitted to the bar, but is now extensively in- 
terested in timber lands and mill property in Minnesota. He has 
represented the city of Minneapolis in the State legislature, and 
from 1861 to 1865 was surveyor-general of the State. Caroline A. 
married Dr. Freeland S. Holmes, who was a surgeon in the Sixth 
Regiment Maine Volunteers, and died while in the service in Sep- 
tember, 1863. Her home is in Minneapolis. 

Davis Washburn, a native of Raynhani (and cousin of Israel), 
commenced trade at North Livermore about 1819. He had previ- 
ously been in business in Hallowell with Asa Barton. After remov- 
ing to Livermore he was interested in a store at Dixfield, his 
brother-in-law, James M. Williams, of Taunton, being a partner in 
the business at both places. Their trade was quite large. He died 
in 1832, at the age of forty. His widow, several years afterwards, 
married William Henry Brettun, jr. His surviving children are 
George W. C. WasJiburn^ of Needhara, Mass., and John M. Wash- 
hum, of Boston, Treasurer of the Old Colony Railroad Company. 
NeJiemiah, his youngest son, died in Washington in 1873. 

Charles Barrell was for a time a partner with Mr. Washburn, 
5 



54 



HISTOEY OF LIVERMOEE. 



and afterwards liad a store upon tlie Intervale, He was a member 
of the legislature from Livermore in 1831 ; was proprietor of the 
Elm House in Portland for many years, and owned and sold the val- 
uable property on which is now situated the prosperous village of 
Ligonia, in Cape Elizabeth. C 31. Barrell, the well-known con- 
ductor on the railroad from Waterville to Danville Junction for 
nearly a quarter of a century, is his son. 

Jefferson and Mekritt Coolidge were traders at North Liver- 
more for several years, transacting an extensive country trade. Jeff- 
erson sold out and went to Buckfield, and Merritt moved to 
Hallowell. Afterwards both settled in Portland and became whole- 
sale grocers. Merritt died in 1866, Among the other traders in 
town were Simeon Hersey, Palmer Elliot, Otis Thompson, at 
the Corner, and Samuel B, Holt, Abner S, Aldrich, Barzillai 
Latham, Isaac and Lee Strickland, Dorillus Morison, and G. 
W. C. Washburn, at the village. Within the last half century 
there have been many traders in the town, but further notices can- 
not be given within the limits to which these sketches must be con- 
fined. 

In that part of the town which is now East Livermore there 
were several traders at an early day, among Avhom were Elisha 
Pettingill and Lot P. Nelson at the Falls, 

Samuel Morison, who had been an officer in the militia and a 
dejjuty sheriff for many years, living on the west side of the river, 
previous to 1830 opened a store on the east side, at Haines' Corner. 
He was born in Falmouth, Me., May, 1788, and settled in Livermore 
as early as 1810. He moved to Bangor in 1835, Avhere he was depu- 
ty sheriff and recorder of the municipal court. His wife (a daugh- 
ter of Lieut, Samuel Benjamin) died Dec, 9, 1860, and he survived 
her until September, 1867, They had five children : Samuel Benj- 
amin (M, D, Bowdoin College, 1837), who practised his profession 
first in Livermore (which town he rejiresented in the legislature in 
1842 and 1844), and afterwards in Bangor, where he has resided for 
many years. He was a surgeon in the Second Regiment Maine 
Volunteers, and is now pension agent for the eastern district in 
Maine ; I)orillus, a jirominent and wealthy citizen of Minneapolis, 
Minn,, and for two years its mayor; Harrison G. 0., a lawyer in 
Sebec, Piscataquis County, and representing that class in the legisla- 
ture of Maine for 1841, now a citizen of Minneapolis, and now or 



HISTORY OF LI^^3EM0RE. 



55 



recently, an officer of the internal revenue; Russell S., a merchant in 
Bangor; Betsey, Avife of Samuel F. Fuller, formerly a trader in East 
Livermore, and now a farmer in Bangor, and Dorcas, wife of 
Nelson Jordan, a trader at Lincoln, Me. 

Francis F. Haines, son of Capt. Peter Haines, was about 1830 in 
trade at East Livermore Corner and at the Falls, having a partner 
and doing a large business, for the time, under the firm of Haines & 
Page. At a subsequent time Job Haskell was his partner in 
trade. He has been an active justice of the peace for many years, 
has frequently been in town office, and has been a member of the 
legislature. He married Linda Bates, sister of Hon. James and 
Rev. George Bates, in 1812. His children were Emeline, wife of 
Earl S. Goodrich, Esq., of St. Paul, Minn.; Linda Ann, wife of Hon. 
Timothy O. Howe, U. S. Senator from Wisconsin ; Mary, widow of 
the late Dr. E. P. Eastman, of Platteville, Wis.; Francis F. (de- 
ceased), who was an artist; Silas B., a lawyer in Colorado; 3Iar- 
shall, deceased ; Sophia, wife of Joseph Lee, of St. Paul, and 
Frederic, a physician in Skowhegan. Mr. Haines' first wife died in 
1861, and he married in 1862 the widow of the late Hon. Stephen 
H. Kead, of Lewiston. Mr. Haines was born in February, 1793. 



Williamson, in his History of Maine, places the population of 
"Livermore and Richardson," in 1790, at 400. Livermore, alone, in 
1795, the date of its incorporation, had probably not over that num- 
ber. In 1798, Rev. Paul Coffin {vide Missionary Tour in Maine) 
says it contained 130 flmiilies. From the time of its incorporation 
until 1820 there was a large immigration, principally from Massachu- 
setts; nor was the increase of population, if we are to believe 
Mr. Coffin, to be wholly accounted for in this way. In his 
journal of the tour made in 1798 he writes: "There were in 
this place six pairs of twins under five years." Thus, with these 
liberal and wholesome sources of increase, the progress of the good 
town seemed to be assured, and so it was for a season. But, at 
length, owing in part to a policy of the State, about forty years ago, 
unfriendly to the introduction or increase of manufactures, and in 
part to the opening of the boundless and promising regions of the 
West, and in a less degree to other causes, a period of rest, followed 
by one of retrogression, set in. 

The course of population since the commencement of the present 



66 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

century has been as follows : 1800,863; 1810,1,560; 1820,2,174; 
1830, 2,445; 1840, 2,745. After the division of the town (1843), 
1850,1,764; 1860,1,596; 1870, 1,467. As will be seen, there has 
been a steady decrease of population since 1850. There is some 
reason to believe, however, that there has been a turn in the tide. 
Manufactures of wood, and of boots and shoes, and of some other 
articles have been introduced and established ; population seems to 
be flowing in ratlier than out of the town, and altogether there ap- 
pears to be promise of a healthy growth in the future, especially if 
the " Yalley Railroad " shall be built. 



HISTOEY OF LIVEKMOIIE. 57 



CHAPTER V. 

AFFAIRS POLITICAL, MUNICIPAL, AND MILITARY. 

It appears that in the year 1797 the question of separating the 
District of Maine from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts was 
agitated, and the people of Livermore were called upon to express 
tlieir opinion on the proposition. This was done by vote in town- 
meeting, on the tenth of May in that year, at which all the votes 
cast (twenty-two in number) were in favor of separation. Thus 
early were the people of this town of the belief that it was for the 
interest of Maine to cut loose from the parent Commonwealth, and 
set up for herself. There can be little doubt that their vote was a 
wise one, or that, if it had been followed by separation as early as 
the beginning of the century, Maine would have originated a policy 
for herself, built up business centres of her own, and have gathered 
within her boundaries in seventy years after her independence a 
population much larger than she now re})orts. Tlie subject came up 
again in 1807, when the vote of the town was, for separation, 
eighty-three; against it, fifty-four. In 1816, the town declared for a 
new State by the decisive vote of one hundred and sixty-three yeas 
to eight nays. Upon the question of adopting the State Constitu- 
tion in 1819 the affirmative vote was seveiityrsi.v, the negative two. 

There was during the early times, it would seem, a general impa- 
tience of existing relations and a desire for change, for not only did 
the inhabitants of the town wish to be set off from Massachusetts in 
1797, and subsequently, but many of theni were uneasy in view of 
their relations toward each other. And so in 1798 the people began 
to interest themselves on the question of dividing the town. At a 
public meeting in that year a vote was passed giving consent to the 
setting off of the territory on the east side of the river into a town 
by itself. The project, however, was allowed to sleep, and was not 
renewed till 1843, a period of forty-five years, when it was carried 
into effect and the town of East Livermore incoi-porated. In 1804, 



58 



HISTOEY OF LIVERMORE. 



the inhabitants of a neighborhood in Jay seem to have made some 
movement towards annexation to Livermore, but the town I'epelled 
the suitors by voting on the fourth day of November in that year 
that " the bend of tlie river in Jay shall not be annexed onto this 
town." Upon the question of county relations the opinions of the 
people were not without some changes. Jan. 11, 1796, the town voted 
"to remain as we are in preference to a new county." On Jan. 16, 
1804, it voted to be annexed to the new county (Oxford). On the fifth 
of the next month it reconsidered this action and voted to be annexed 
to Kennebec. But January 3, 1805, it swung back to its first posi- 
tion, and again voted "to join the new county now in contempla- 
tion." A few uionths after this the county of Oxford, including 
Livermore within its limits, was organized, and the town contrib- 
uted thereto, in the persons of Gen. David Learned and Di-. Cyrus 
Hamlin, its first sheriff" and clerk. The county of Androscoggin 
Avas incorporated in 1854. Li it are ten towns, among which are 
Livermore and East Livermore, and the cities of Lewiston and 
Auburn. Auburn is the county seat. It is the most compact, and 
perhaps the most thriving, county in the State. 

The vote of the town at different periods indicates the political 
opinions of the citizens. In 1795, at the first election after the in- 
corporation, it voted for governor, and (as has been stated) gave all 
its votes (40) for Increase Sumner, In 1796, it cast 18 votes for 
Stephen Longfellow for elector of president and vice-president and 
1 vote for John K. Smith, and it gave all its votes for Peleg Wads- 
worth for representative in congress. In 1800, its votes for repre- 
sentative in congress were, for Stephen Longfellow, 61 ; Daniel 
Davis, 36; John K. Smith, 25. In 1801, Caleb Strong, the federalist 
candidate for governor, had 37 votes, and Elbridge Gerry, the re- 
publican candidate, had 18 votes. In 1802, Strong had 73 votes and 
Gerry 1 vote. In 1804, Strong had 82 and James Sullivan 44 votes. 
In 1805, the town became republican, and Sullivan had 63 votes to 
48 for Strong. In 1809, Levi Lincoln (republican) had 126 votes 
anil Christopher Gore (federalist) 47 ; for lieutenant-governor, 
Joseph B. Varnum 121 and D.ivid Cobb 46 votes. In 1812, the 
vote was 202 for Gerry and 43 for Strong. In November of this 
year James Madison received 108 votes for president and DeWitt 
Clinton received 36 votes. The gubernatorial vote in 1814 was, for 
Samuel Dexter, 198, for Caleb Strong, 45. Benjamin Bradford and 
William II. Brettun were elected delegates to the Brunswick Con- 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOIIE. 59 

A'ention (on the question of separation). Miircli 16, 1818, Enoch 
Lincohi, for tlie office of representative in congress, received 45 
votes and Jndah Dana 11 votes. At the State election, on the sixth 
of the succeeding April, tlie vote stood, according to the record, 
"For governor. His Excellency, John Brooks, Esq., 44; Hon. Benja- 
min W. Crowningshield, 113." 

The town from an early period in Mr. Jeiferson's administration 
was steadily an;l decidedly republican. It gave its vote for John 
Quincy Adams in 1824, and in 1828 it cast for him 11)4 votes to 50 
for Gen. Jackson. In this year it gave Reuel Waslibui'n, for con- 
gress, 211 votes auil 20 to J. W. Ripley. For governor, in 1830, 
Jonathan G. Huuton received 261 votes and Samuel E. Smith 136. 
Dr. William Snow, of the east side, was elected representative. In 
1832, the vote for governor was, Daniel Goodenow (national repub- 
lican), 282, Samuel E. Smith (democratic republican), 113. For 
president, the Clay electors had 254, the Jackson 109, and the anti- 
masonic 19 votes. In the sharply contested election of 1834, Peleg 
Sprague (whig) had 306 votes, Robert P. Dunlap (democratic), 151, 
and Thomas A. Hill (anti-masonic) 19. In 1837, Eilward Kent 
(whig) received 293 and Gorham Parks (dem.) 138 votes. In 1840, 
the vote was, for Kent, 376; for John Fairfield (dem.), 157. In the 
presidential election of 1856 (after the division of the town), Fre- 
mont (rep.) received 240 votes and Buchanan (dem.) 99. Hannibal 
Hamlin (rep.), for governor, 242; Wells and others, 139. Israel 
Washburn, jr. (rep.), received in 1860 211 votes for governor to 149 
for Ephraim K. Smart (dem.). Abraham Lincoln in 1864 had 219 
votes and Gen. George B. McLellan 113 votes for president. U. S. 
Grant (rep.) in 1872 received 183 votes to 88 for Horace Greeley 
(liberal rep. and dem.). Farther details in this direction are unnec- 
essary. The majorities were uniform and considerable for the old 
republican party so long as that party existed, and they have since 
been uniform and equally strong for the national republican party 
(1828 to 1834) ; for the whigs (1834 to 1854), and for the i-epublican 
party since 1854. 

Perhaps the strength of the anti-federalist feeling in town, in the 
days of the greatest vigor of that party, cannot be better illustrated 
than by recording the following sentiment given by one of its citi- 
zens at a Fourth of July celebration at the Norlands in 1812 : 
"Caleb Strong, Governor of Massachusetts; dark and mysterious 
are the ways of Providence." A subsequent celebration at the same 



60 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



place (1830) was noteworthy for an expression (thus early made) 
on the question of woman's sphere and rights. Rev. George Bates 
delivered an oration in the church. An arbor was extended upon 
the lawn of the Norlands in which, after the services in the church, 
dinner was served. The dinner was largely attended, and many 
toasts were drunk and speeches made. Charles D, Learned, Esq., of 
Mississippi, son of Gen. Learned, of whom mention has been made 
as one of the early settlers in the town, was present and made a 
speech which threatened for the moment to interrupt the harmony 
of the occasion, but for a moment only, and the festivities pro- 
ceeded, when a good lady, inspired, it may be, by what had hap- 
pened, sent in to the table a sentiment expressing the hope that the 
occasion might not be marred by a too familiar acquaintance Avith 
the wine cup ; whereupon a gentleman at the table immediately 
proposed, " Woman — let her remember that her place is not to go 
about meddling with public matters, but to stay at home and mend 
her husband's breeches." The reception of this toast was such as 
to show that woman and her rights were appreciated and respected 
even then. At this celebration another toast was given which is 
remembered. It was something like this : " Francis Baylies, of 
Massachusetts, and Peleg Sprague, of Maine; twin brothers having 
tNvo political fathers, one called Jackson, and the other called Adams." 



Some brief references to the municiiial doings and aftairs of the 
town during the eai'ly stages of its history are subjoined : 

The second town-meeting was held at the house of Dea. Elijah 
Livermore Aug. 10, 1795. Chose David Learned, moderator. 
Voted to raise £30 for support of roads. Voted to raise £40 for 
supj)ort of schools. Voted to raise £5 for supporting the poor and 
paying town officers and other town charges. Voted to warn town- 
meetings by posting n\) notification at the dwelling-house of Reuben 
Wing, at the Ferry, and the three mills of said town. 

At the annual meeting March 6, 179G, Elisha Williams was 
elected moderator; Samuel Hillman, clerk and treasurer; and Da- 
vid Learned, Sylvan us Boardman, and Thomns Chase, selectmen. 

May 9, 179G, chose Isaac Livermore delegate to attend a conven- 
tion to be held in Paris. 

March 6, 1797, Elisha Williams Avas chosen moderator; Cyrus 
Hamlin, clerk and treasurer; David Learned, Haines Learned, and 
Isaac Livermore, selectmen ; Abijah Monroe, Samuel Hillman, and 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 61 

Daniel Clark, assessors. Voted not to act on the eighth article in 
the warrant, which was to consider "the desire of William Lindsey 
and other inhabitants of the south-east part of the town requesting 
their being set off to the town of liittlesborough " (Leeds). 

On the seventeenth of April of this year the line of the old cen- 
tral highway of the town was changed by vote of the town as fol- 
lows : Voted to alter the road running from the outlet of Saberdy 
Pond* by Mr. Nathaniel Dailey's to Mr. Isaac Lovewell's, viz., run- 
ning two rods the west side of Nathaniel Dailey's house, thence north 
within six rods of the west side of David Learned's housef to an oak 
stump, thence on north to the west side of Dr. Hamlin's house about 
two rods, thence on to Mr. Lovewell's where it is now traveled. 

1798, March 5. At the annual meeting this day "the presence, 
aid, and blessing of the Supreme Law Giver was invoked by Mr. 
Elisha Williams in a jivayer peculiarly elegant and pertinent." The 
following officers, among others, were chosen : Elisha Williams, 
moderator; Cyrus Hamlin, clerk and treasurer; Isaac Liverraore, 
Abijah Monroe, and Daniel Clark, selectmen ; Nathaniel Perley, 
Peter Haines, and Benjamin True, assessors. 

1799, March 4. Dr. Cyrus Hamlin was chosen moderator, and 
Elisha Williams was chosen clerk and treasurer. Benjamin True, 
David Learned, and Abijah Monroe were elected selectmen, and 
Nathaniel Perley,- Peter Haines, and David Morse, assessors. 

1800, 11,000 was voted for highway repairs, also 1100 for a road 
from John Records' to the south line of the town, and $100 for 
building a bridge at the outlet of Turner Pond.l $300 Avas raised 
for schools and $50 for town charges. 

1801, March 2. Dr. Hamlin was chosen moderator, and Gen. 
Learned clerk and treasurer, and five selectmen were elected, viz., 
Sylvanus Boardman, Nathaniel Perley, Pelatiah Gibbs, Samuel Ben- 
jamin, and Uriah Foss. At an adjournment at the Baptist meeting- 
house $300 Avas voted for breaking roads in the winter. 

1802, May 5. Voted that the representatives of Livermore be 
instructed to oppose the proposed bridge across Androscoggin 
River at Davis' Mills (the Falls) in Livermore and advocate the 
proposed bridge in Jay. 

At the annual town-meeting April 6, 1812, Rev. Joshua Sonle, 
afterwards Bishop Soule, of the Metliodist Episcopal Church, was 
elected moderator. He was a member of the school committee in 



*Bartlett's Pond. tNow owned by heirs of Capt. Otis Pray. jNow called Brettun's Pond. 



62 HISTOPvY OF LIVEKMOEE. 

1816, and was for several years a respected and influential citizen of 
the town. 

In March, 1839, the town pnrcliased of William Thompson the 
flirm situated on the road from North Livermore to the Falls, the 
same now or recently owned and occupied by Leander Bigelow, on 
which to make provision for the support of its poor. This farm was 
sold in 1843, and that formei-ly owned by Thomas Chase, on the east 
side of Long Pond and northerly of Gibbs' Mills, was bought of 
Phineas Gibbs March 19, 1860, and is now occu))ied for a home for 
the poor. A practice had previously existed, and one which avms 
common to a large number of the country towns in Maine and 
New England, of striking off the support of the town paupers 
in open town-meeting to the lowest bidder. At the spring meet- 
ing held April 2, 1821, the usual vote was passed "to set up the 
poor of the town at public auction," and Mrs. L and four chil- 
dren were bid off at $2.99 per week; that is, the lowest bidder 
agreed to provide for and support them for a year for this sum. 

S h C e, a spinster who lived to be nearly one hundred years 

old, a member ot one of the churches in town, and a famous tea 
drinker in her day, whose recipe for tea making of " a spunful for a 
pairson and a spunful for the pot" was fiivorably regarded by her 
old lady friends, was struck off at the price of seventeen cents per 
week ! Tlie auction continued until contracts were made for the 
maintenance of twelve human beings for a year at the smallest ex- 
pense for which any one would contract to support tliem. That 
such a practice at this day wonld seem inhuman, and have no toler- 
ance among the people of the town, is evidence that, whatever may 
be her relation to the past in respect to material interests, to out- 
ward growth or decay, in those matters which refer to our common 
humanity, and have regard to the influence of Christian civilization 
among men, she occujjies a position greatly in advance of that 
which she held fifty years ago. 



The first militia company in town was organized in 1800. David 
Learned was captain; William Coolidge, lieutenant; Henry Saw- 
telle, ensign. This company embraced all the territory west of the 
river. In 1803, the company was divided, making two comj^anies on 
the west side of the river, and in the same year a company was or- 
ganized on the east side. Previous to the division Learned had 
been elected major of the regiment and Coolidge had moved away. 



HISTORY OF LR^ERMORE. 



63 



The first officers of tlie north company were Jesse Stone, captain ; 
Jacob Gibbs, lieutenant; Thomas Cliase, jr., ensign. Of the south 
company tlie first officers were Henry Sawtelle, captain; James 
Starbird, lieutenant; Joseph Mills, ensign. Of the east company 
the ofiicers first elected were Peter Haines, captain; Robert Morri- 
son, lieutenant; Theodore Marston, ensign. 

In 1809, a company of cavalry was formed in Livermore, a majori- 
ty of whose members were residents of the town. The first ofiicers 
were Samuel At wood, captain; Isaac Talbot, of Turner, first lieu- 
tenant; , second lieutenant; Aaron S. Barton, of Dixfield, 

cornet. Subsequently, tlie ofiicers and members of the company 
were nearly always inhabitants of Livermore. The captains of the 
company elected after Captain Atwood were Simeon Waters, Daniel 
Coolidge, Alpheus Kendall, Isaac Strickland, Otis Pray, Hastings 
Strickland, JMatthew jNI. Stone, Hezekiah Atwood, Elisha Coolidge, 
and Rufus Hewett. The company was constituted for many years, 
in large proportion, of the intelligent and active young men of the 
town, and was imbued with the true military spirit. It was the 
pride of the people. No boy or girl belonging to the town ever 
attended the "general muster," at Canton Point, and saw the 
"troopers" enter the field, mounted upon the finest horses that 
could be procured for the occasion, and clothed in scarlet, but was 
proud to acknowledge that he (or she) too hailed from Livermore. 

From these organizations graduated many a local military celebri- 
ty, facile princeps among whom was Colonel Billy Benjamin, every 
inch a soldier, whose voice rich, but thunder-toned, and whose man- 
ly form and martial bearing as he rode upon the field on muster-day, 
calling "Attention, the regiment!" will not be forgotten by any person 
who was privileged to be present on one of those notable occasions. 

In the late civil war the loyal men of Livermore rallied to the 
support of their country's flag with promptness and alacrity. She 
contributed, as they were called for, her full quotas of volunteers, 
made generous ])rovision for the families of her absent soldiers, and 
has cheerfully paid to the last dollar all assessments made and all 
liabilities incurred on account of the war. 

In the appendix Avill be found the names of those who gave their 
services to their country in its hour of peril. In what manner this 
inland country town performed her duty in "the uprising of a great 
people " may be inferred from this roll of honor. It contains ninety- 
four names in a population of less than fifteen hundred ! 



64 HISTOKY OF LIVEKMOEE. 



CHAPTER VI. 

MATTERS RELIGIOUS AND ECCLESIASTICAL. 

Deacon Livermore, the founder of the town, Avas not only a 
CongregationaUst, but the deacon of a clinrch of tliat denomination 
in Watertown, before lie came to Port Royal, and it would seem 
reasonable to suppose that his earliest care, after the planting of his 
settlement had well commenced, would have been to establish a 
church of his own faith among his people. Undoubtedly, this was 
his desire and purpose, and this presumption is supported by the 
fact that a special effort was made to this end about the year 1793, 
and that preaching was had, from time to time, by Rev, John Strick- 
land and others who were CongregationaUst ministers. But from 
some cause, of which no positive and well accepted account remains, 
this attempt was unsuccessful. It is believed, however, that it will 
not be difficult to form from the facts which are known a satisfactoiy 
hypothesis as to what this cause was. Deacon Livermore was, in 
the first place, more a practical than a controversial or proselyting 
Christian, and, in the second place, he inclined to that school of his 
church which was arminian rather than calvinistic in doctrine. 
And while it is true that the larger part of the settlers during the 
early years of the town were Congregational ists, there were a con- 
siderable number who were not; and of the Congregationalists a 
portion were Calvinists. The Rev. Elisha Williams, a son-in-law of 
Dea. Livermore, was a Baptist and Calvinist, and a movement was 
made, in which some of the most earnest and zealous men in the 
town participated, to gather a Baptist Church. As all positive and 
sincere efforts are apt to be, this was rewarded with speedy and 
marked success. But it did not receive the sympathy of Dea. Liv- 
ermore, and so having failed to plant a church of his own denomina- 
tion, he found himself^ as between the two sects wdiich sought his 
favor and membership, more in sympathy with the Methodists, rep- 
resented in the town by Rev. Jesse Lee, and who had gathered 
about him not a few enthusiastic believers, than with the Baptists. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 65 

These, then, were the militant and aggressive religious and ecclesi- 
astical forces in the town ; and a vigorous contest was maintained 
by each to justify by the results it achieved the superiority of its 
faith to that of its rival, and its better adaptedness to the needs and 
condition of the people. But all this while many settlers who, like 
Dea. Livennore, had been connected with Congregationalist 
Churches, or (if not church members) with Congregationalist fami- 
lies and parishes, and who, like him, were not inclined to attach 
themselves to a church or society of Calvinists, unlike him, were not 
attracted to the Methodists. They were men who would have been 
glad to be connected with a church or parish of the " Standing Or- 
der" if there had been one, and who, if such an organization had 
been made, would very probably have gone, in after years, with that 
section of the denomination which followed Dr. Channing and the 
Wares in their revolt against the orthodoxy of the day. And so, be- 
ing left as sheep without a shepherd, when, during the last yeaVs of 
the eighteenth century. Rev. Isaac Root and Rev. Thomas Barnes, 
itinerating disciples of tlie Universalist faith, came among them, 
they felt at liberty to hear and give hospitable reception to the doc- 
trines of these pioneers, the only champions Avith them of the Broad 
Church. These denominations, the Baptist, Methodist, and Univer- 
salist, have been the principal and almost the only organized ecclesi- 
astical bodies in town to the present time. Their relative strength, 
as exhibited by the per capita division of the ministerial fund for 
1871, and which does not greatly vary from the average returns for 
the last half century, is Baptists, thirty parts ; Methodists, twenty- 
eight parts; Universalists, fifty-eight parts; all others, thirteen 
parts. This fund was derived from the sale of lots of land in the 
town which had been reserved and set apart, in the original grant, 
for this object. The land was sold many years ago and the proceeds 
were funded, the income only being used by the several denomina- 
tions, according to their respective numbers. 

The zeal and interest in religious matters exhibited by the people 
of the town in the first stage of its history are illustrated in some 
notes by Thomas Chase, Esq., made in 1852, in the blank pages of 
Major Fish's Journal,* of which the following extract is given 
" Livermore was famous for producing preachers at an early day. 
The first was Henry Bond, of Watertown, Mass., about 1797. He 

*This Journal may be found in the appendix. 



66 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

died in Livermore." (There are two eri'ors in this extract; first, Mr. 
Bond — if his son, Dr. Bond, is correct in his "Genealogies" — was 
not a clergyman, but was a school-master, and secondly, he died in 
March, 1796. But Perez Ellis, not mentioned by Mr. Chase, was a 
Baptist minister about this time.) "The second was Otis Robinson. 
He moved to Shapleigh, then to Salisbury, N. H. The third was 
Elisha Williams. . . The fourth was Zebedee Delano, from Win- 
throp. He went to Lebanon. The fifth was Samuel Hillman, from 
Martha's Vineyard, a Methodist. He died in Monmouth ; was one 
of the ' four partners.' The sixth was Samuel Simmons, of Connec- 
ticut. He was a soldier of the Revolution ; was at the taking of 
Montreal, the battle of Quebec under Gen. Montgomery, the taking 
of Gen. Burgoyne under Gen. Arnold, and many other battles, and 
lastly, at the battle of Monmouth. He died in Canton, Oxford 
County." (Franklin Simmons, the sculptor, who is now living in 
Rome, is the great grandson of this man.) "The seventh was Sylva- 
nus Boardman, from Martha's Vineyard. He died in New Sharon ; 
was one of the 'four partners.' The eighth was Thomas Wyman. 
He died at Livermore ; was a son of Abram Wyman, of Woburn, 
Mass., an Indian fighter. The nintli was Levi Walker, from Mllford, 
Mass. He was son of John Walker, who went with Benedict 
Arnold to Quebec; was first a Methodist, afterwards a Baptist. He 
went to Massachusetts. The last I knew of him he was at Stonitig- 
ton, Conn. The tenth was Pliny Brett. He returned to Bridge- 
water, Mass., where he originated; was a Methodist. The eleventh 
was Ransom Norton, from Martha's Vineyard. He died at Liver- 
more and was one of the 'four partners.'" 

The " four partners," mentioned above, the names of three of 
whom are here given — the other was James Norton — came from 
Martha's Vineyard to Livermore about the same time, and under 
some agreement to share with each other their gains and losses. 

BAPTISTS. 

The first denomination fairly in the field was the Baptist. A brief 
but interesting history of this church has been contributed by its 
pastor (1873), Rev. Carleton Parker, and is as follows : 

" History of the Baptist Chukch. — The formation of the first 
Baptist Church in Livermore was the result of a revival which oc- 
curred in a somewhat singular manner in the year of 1793. Mr. Z. 
Delano, who subsequently became a Baptist preacher, but then a 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



67 



thoughtless sinner, while on a visit in Winthrop, heard a sermon 
preached by Elder Case, in the Congregational meeting-house, from 
Romans i. 5. While listening to the preacher the Lord discovered 
to him his wretched condition as a sinner. He returned home, filled 
with a sense of his own sinful ways, and remained for some time in 
a distressed state of mind. At length he submitted his heart to 
Christ and commenced the worship of God in his own family, but 
revealed not his new-found hopes to his neighbors. His light, how- 
ever, was not long hidden; an interesting providence of God 
brouglit it forth. Elisha Williams, son of a Congregational minis- 
ter, of East Hartford, Conn., a liberally educated young man, was at 
that time in Livermore teaching school. One morning, while pass- 
ing to the school-house, he called on Mr. Delano and found him en- 
gaged in his religious devotions witli his family. Being himself 
thoughtless, and not knowing of a pious flimily in town, this unex- 
pected event made a deep impression and was blessed of God to the 
salvation of his soul. Before reaching his school-house he was so 
overpowered with a sense of his lost condition that he called upon 
God for mercy. God heard, and he was soon rejoicing in a Saviour's 
love. This was the commencement of a work of grace among the 
peoiole. The converts had distinct and cheering views of the doc- 
trines of the gospel, and were bold to invite sinners to Christ. As 
usual, ojjposition became violent, but the grace of God prevailed, 
alnd many were made new creatures in Christ Jesus. Several be- 
came Baptists, and on the 7th of August, 1793, a regular Baptist 
Church was duly organized, consisting of seventeen members.* 
The organization took place in a barn, now owned iind occupied by 
Mr. James Chase. Frequent and large additions were made to this 
church. For a time they met in a school-house; then they built a 
small meeting-house in which they worshijied until 1807, when they 
erected a new meeting-house at the Corner, now called North Liver.- 
more. In the first revival Elder Case, of Readfield, and Mr. Smitli, 
of Fayette, were the principal Baptist ministers. Mr. Smith aided 
the church a short period after it Avas organized. Rev. Sylvanus 
Boardmau and Rev. Ransom Norton were among those whom God 
called at that time with an holy calling. Rev. Zebedee Delano and 

*The names of origiual members are as follows: Daniel Holman, Pelatiah Gibbs, Isaac 
Lovewell, Elisha Williams, Otis Robinsou, Henry Bond, James Delano, Zebedee Delano, 
Thomas Wymau, Peter Godding, David Reed, Anna Gibbs, Hannah Robinson, Mai-y Delano, 
Susanna Wyman, Grace Delano, Catherine Walker. 



68 HISTOEY OP LIVEEMOEE. 

-Rev. Elisha Williams entered at once upon the M'ork of the minis- 
try. Six others also have gone out of this church as ministers of 
the gospel, viz., Henry Bond,* Otis Robinson, William Goding, 
Thomas Wyrnan, Jnson Livermore, and William Wyman. Isaac 
Lovewell, one of the original members, distinguished himself by his 
benevolence and liberality. He sustained a large share in the erec- 
tion of their second house of \vorshi]>, and at his death he made a 
donation to the church of |810 to aid the support of the gospel. 

The following are the names of the })astoi's, with the year of their 
settlement: Rev. Sylvanus Boardraan, 1802; Rev. John Haynes, 
1811; Rev. David Nutter, 1824; Rev. R. Milner, 1834; Rev. Na- 
than Chapman, 1836; Rev. Charles Miller, 1839; Rev. John Billings, 
1844; Rev. A. B. Pendleton, 1846; Rev. David Nutter, 1849; Rev. 
Lucius Bradford, 1853; Rev. William A. Durfee, 1859; Rev. E. S. 
Fish, 1861 ; Rev. Carleton Parker, 1871. 

This church has, by numerous dismissions, aided in the organiza- 
tion of four churches in its vicinity. Notwithstanding these 
dismissions, and numerous others to individuals who have removed 
their relation to churches where they now reside, God in mercy has, 
at diffei-ent times, made additions. Within the last two years 
twenty-nine have been added to this church ; the whole number of 
members is now ninety-six. The meeting-house built in 1807 was 
burned down in 1847, and the present one was dedicated to the 
worship of God in 1848. In the summer and fall of 1871 this house 
was thoroughly repaired, painted, and carpeted. A nice chandelier 
was presented to the church by Mr. Arad Thompson, of Bangor, 
Me., and Mr. Erastus Thom]ison, of Hopkinton, Mass., sons of the 
late Dea. Ira Thompson, of Livermore." 

It appears by the town records that on the 2d of October, 1807, 
the town voted " to accept the Rev. Sylvanus Boardman as town 
minister, to have the remaining part of right of land by giving secu- 
rity for $450 to be divided between the Methodist and Universalist so- 
cieties." For some reason this plan was not carried into execution, no 
j)ayment or security was made to the other societies, and Mr. Board- 
man labored rather as the minister of the Baptists than of the town. 
He was, however, greatly respected by the people, without regard to 
church or sect, and exercised a large and wholesome influence in the 
town. He was a representative from Livermore in the legislature of 

*As to Mr. Bond see page 66. 



HISTORY OF LIVEKMOr.E. 



69 



the Commonwcaltli in 1802. His son, the Rev. George Dana 
Boardman, the distinguished and devoted missionary, was born in 
Livermore Feb. 8, 1801. lie died in Bunnah Feb. 11, 1831. He 
graduated at Waterville College in tlie class of 1822, studied at the 
Theological Seminary in Andover, and was ordained at North Yar- 
mouth, Me., Feb. 16, 1825, He sailed for Calcutta in the same year, 
where he arrived on the 2d of December. He acquired the Burraan 
language and entered ui)on his labors at JMaulmain in 1827, and 
planted a mission which became the central point of all the Baptist 
missions in Burmah. He was earnest, laithful, and successful, but 
fell a victim to the exertions which liis zeal and fidelity urged him 
to make. He has left a very precious name, not in his own church 
only, but throughout Christendom. 

The Rev. John Haynes, the second minister, enjoyed the longest 
pastorate of any of the nunisters of this church. Nathaniel Haynes, 
Esq., a graduate of Bowdoin College, and a lawyer and editor in 
Bangor, who died about 1835, and Col. Isaac C. Haynes, of Hamp- 
den, formerly editor of the Bangor Democrat, were his sons. A 
daughter married the Hon. Calvin Hopkins, of Mt. Vernon, Me. 

The next long pastorate was that of Rev. David Nutter, an 
Englishman, a man of ability, and in his first settlement exhibiting 
remarkable power as a revivalist. Mr. Nutter has recently died at 
the age of eighty years. Mr. Nutter was during his first pastorate 
in Livermore a frequent correspondent of the periodicals of his 
church. The church and parish have been fortunate on the whole 
in the character of their ministers. They have been good men and 
citizens as well as acceptable pastors and teachers. 

Among the members who were earnest and active in carrying 
forward the work of the church and promoting its 2:)rosperity in its 
early days were Deacons Ransom Norton, Sarson Chase, Pelatiah 
Gibbs, William Sanders, .John Elliot, Ciiarles Barrell, Ira Thompson, 
Dr, Cyrus Handin, Messrs, Henry Bond, Jesse Kidder, George 
Chandler, James and Mayhew Chase, William Thompson, James 
Walker, and Elder Thomas Wyman. 

Second Baptist Church. — A small meeting-house was built by 
the Baptists in the southerly part of the town about 1810, and a 
church was gathered of people living in the neighborhood, some in 
Turner, but the majority in Livermore. The Rev. Ransom Norton 
was for nearly thirty years its faithful and devoted pastor, traveling 
6 ' 



70 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

on every Sundny from his home, nearly six miles distant, to 
minister to his little flock. His compensation was in his work, 
and not in his fee, for his pecuniary reward must have been very 
small. Since the decease of Elder Norton the church has experi- 
enced many changes. Its old hoixse of worship has been abandoned 
and a new one erected near North Turner Bridge. Mr, Norton was 
not brilliant or learned, but he was a grave, honest man, who 
wrought in a "sad sincerity" for his people and the truth as he un- 
derstood it. 

Church in East Livermore. — Before the division of the town 
a church was organized in East Livermore, at a place, about a mile 
below the Falls, called " Shy." It was afterwards removed to the 
Falls, where it has enjoyed a good measure of prosperity, and has 
recently erected a commodious and handsome brick church. The 
Rev. Jared F. Eveleth is its ])resent pastor; its first was Rev. Rob- 
ert Low. 

FREE BAPTISTS. 
Recently a cliurch of this denomination hns been organized in 
town, which holds its meetings at the Center, in the meeting-house 
formerly occupied by the Methodists. It has for its minister the 
Rev. Hezekiah Atwood, son of the late Cn])t. Hezekiah Atwood, of 
Livermore. 

METHODISTS. 
In the year 1793, the Rev. Jesse Lee,* of Virginia, while on a 
preaching tour in the district of Maine, visited Livermore, where he 
remained for some time and ])lanted the seed from which grew up, 
at length, a strong and vigorous tree. He labored earnestly and 
with much success to teach the doctrhies and commend the polity of 
the church founded by John Wesley. It was favorable to the pur- 
pose of Mr. Lee that, in the absence of any religious organization 
holding arminian or moderately calvinistic views, Dea. Livermore 
became interested in his work and gave to it his sympathy and aid. 
When, tM'o years after the advent of Mr. Lee, the first Methodist 



*Mr. Lee was born in 1758 and died in 1816. The new American Cyclop.-cdia says, " He be- 
came a preacher among the Methodists in 1783 and a traveling companion of Bishop Asbury. 
His notes have been the basis of much of the early history of Methodism in America. He was 
chaplain to congress during six successive terms. He is best known as the apostle of Metho- 
dism in New England." 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 71 

Class in town was formed, Dca. Liverraore and wife, and, at least, 
one of his daughters, joined it as members, and from that time until 
his death, in 1808, he was one of the most influential supporters of 
the church which it represented. 

A church was organized in 1803, through the instrumentality, in 
large part, of the Kev, Joshua Soule, then a resident of Livermore, 
and subsequently a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and 
widely known, especially at the South, where he lived for many 
years. Mr. Soule was a presiding elder and presided at the first 
quarterly conference meeting held in the town, which was in 1803. 

The meeting-house at the center of the town was built in 1803. 
It is still standing, but is no longer occupied by the Methodists. 
For many years before the division it was used by the town for its 
municipal meetings and for elections. Owing to changes, which had 
been going on for a long time in the membership of the church, it 
was no longer a central or convenient point for their meetings, and 
so in the year 1871 the parish bought the spacious house at the Cor- 
ner, formerly owned by Col, Stone, and by suitable alterations made 
an exceedingly neat, convenient, and pleasant house of worship. 
This ohl parish, in its new church, is now enjoying, as its honorable 
history and its devotedness, not only to its religious faith, but to 
every good work and movement for the benefit of the community in 
which it is placed, deserves, a goodly degree of prosperity. Meet- 
ings are held in the church at the Corner and at the village 
on alternate Sundays. This church has now one hundred and twen- 
ty members, while the two churches of which it was the parent, one 
at the Falls and the other at East Livermore, have each a member- 
ship nearly or quite as large. 

So far as is retneinbered, or as can be traced from any records re- 
maining, the clergymen of this den:>niiuation who have statedly 
preached in town are as follows: Revs. Joshua Soule, John T. 

Adams, Dr. Adams, Samuel Hill man, Samuel Thompson, John 

Wilkinson, David Stimpson, Aaron Hum])hrey, Eli Howe, Allen H. 
Cobb, Joshua Randall, Charles Virgin, Philip Munger, George Web- 
ber, D. D., David Copeland, Abel Alton, Benjamin Burnham, Asa 
Greene, S. P. Blake, Benjamin Foster, Alvah Hatch, John True, 
Joseph Gerry, James Farrington, Daniel Dyer, E. H. Gammon, Sam- 
uel Ambrose, Daniel Waterhouse, Caleb Mugford, Joseph Hawkes, 
W. C. Stevens, S. W. Pierce, S. B. Bailey, S. S. Gray, Isaac Lord, 
Francis Grosvenor, Nathan Andrews, M. B. Cummings, Joseph Fair- 



72 HISTORY OF LIVEr.]\IOr.E. , 

banks, and the present pnstor (wlio has kindly conimnnicatcd most 
of the materials from which this notice has been n>:ide), the Rev. 
Thomas Hillman. 

Of those who in the early time labored faithfidly for the upbuild- 
ing of this church may be mentioned the names — in addition to that 
of Dea. Livermore — of Samuel Livermore, Cajjt. Charles J. Baker, 
Simeon Howard, Samuel Hillman, Robert Hayes, John Hayes, Na- 
than Soide, brother of Bishop Joshua Soide and fatlier of Rev. 
Asbury Soule, Col. Thomas Chase, jr., Aaron Barton, John Monroe, 
and Abel Monroe. 

UNIVERSALISTS. 
Between the years 1795 and 1807 there was occasional preachinc? 
in school-houses and dwelling-houses by itinerating ministers ot this 
persuasion, principally by the Rev. Isaac Root and the Rev. Thomas 
Barnes, whose labors were not unfi-uitful in the harvest of proselytes. 
In the latter year a society was formed at a ineeting held on the 
twenty-fourth of November, at which Capt. Samuel Atwood was 
elected moderator, and Dr. Cornelius Holland, clerk, treasurer, and 
collector.* A vote was passed to raise money by subscription for the 
support of preaching. A subscription paper was drawn up and put 
in circulation, the names to which, and the amounts subscribed by 
each, will appear in the appendix. From receipts in the possession 
of the parish it would appear that Mr. Root preached to this society 
a part of the time, at stated periods, in the years 1808, 1809, 1810, 
and 1811. It is probable that JMr. Barnes preached occasionally dur- 
ing this period. At a parish meeting on the 4th of March, 1809, 
Capt. Simeon Waters was chosen moderator, and Dr. Holland, clerk 
and treasurer, and it was voted to pay Mr. Root four dollai's a Sun- 
day for preaching. In 1814, at a parish meeting, it was voted to 
employ a minister, and Abijah Monroe and David JNIorse were 
chosen a committee to engage one. It was also voted to hold the 
meetings at the school-house near Dr. Bradford's. 

In 1816, the Rev. Mi". Sargeant — his christian name does not ap- 
pear — was employed for a short time at live dollars a Sunday. In 
this year a convention was held in the Baptist meeting-house, and 

*There jn-obablj' had been some kind of an organization before this time, althongh no record 
of it remains; for at this meeting Thomas Jiryant was appointed to collect subscription in the 
hands of Artemas Leonard, a former collector, and reference is made to the " Universal Soci- 
ety " in the record of a town-meeting held the October previous. 



: 







HISTORY OF LIVEllMOEE. 73 

Col. Stone Avas engaged to provide entertainment for the ministers 
and singers in attendance, at tlie expense of the society. The next 
ye&r Dr. Benjamin Bradford, Israel Washburn, and Samuel Beals 
were appointed a committee to procure a preacher, and it was voted 
to raise the money for his support by subscription. There is no rec- 
ord for 1818, but in May, 1819, Benjamin Bradford, Israel Wash- 
burn, and Capt. John Leavitt were chosen a standing committee, 
and Israel Washburn, Jesse Stone, Renel Washburn, Ebenezer 
Hinds, Jr., and E])hraim Pray were a committee to make arrange- 
ments for the association which was to be held the next month. It 
was also voted "that the standing committee be empowered to find a 
home for our minister." Who the minister contemplated in thia 
vote was does not appear. Among ihe ministers who preached be- 
tween 1811 and 1819 were the Rev. Thomas Barnes, Rev. Mr. But- 
terfield, and probably Rev. B. Streeter. Rev. William Farwell, of 
Vermont, also visited and preached in the town during this period. 

Between 1819 and 1827 there was preaching every year for a part 
— generally half — of the time by Mr. Streeter, and the Revs. Wm. 
A. Drew, Jabez Woodman, George Bates, Sylvanus Cobb, and 2)er- 
haps by others. In the latter year steps were taken for the building 
of a church, and on the eighth of September a parish meeting was 
held at Avhich William H. Brettun was elected moderator, and Dr. 
Bradford, clerk. A committee, consisting of Otis Pray, Jesse Stone, 
William H. Brettun, Isaac Strickland, Ebenezer Hinds, jr., Daniel 
Coolidge, and Daniel Biiggs, were appointed to fix on a suitable site 
for a meeting-house, estimate the expense thereof, and ascertain, as 
near as might be, the number that Avould assist in defraying it; and 
two weeks were allowed them to make their report. At the ad- 
journment it was voted "that the most suitable site for the meeting- 
house is between the dwelling-houses of Israel Washburn and Otis 
Pray." The meeting was further adjourned to the sixth of October, 
at which time it would seem a plan of the house was presented, for 
it appears that Ebenezer Hinds, jr., Abner Ilolman, Reucl Wash- 
burn, Henry Aldrich, and Simeon Waters were made a committee 
to appraise the pews. The meeting was then adjourned to the 
twentieth of October, when a building committee, of which Henry 
Aldrich, Benjamin Bradford, and Otis Pray were the members, was 
appoiuted. It was voted at this meeting — for the paiish took the 
precaution to sell the pews before a blow was struck on the work — 
" that one-third of the sum for which each pew shall sell shall be 



74 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 

paifl the first of May next and the residue the first of January, 
1829." The sale of pews was then commenced and was continued 
from time to time until fifty-four out of the sixty-one pews which 
the house would contain, and enough to warrant the making of con- 
tracts for the building of it, were sold. Contracts for materials, 
stone work, wood work, etc., were entered into. John Griffith, 
Jr., did the stone work, and the general contractor was Ezra Gary, of 
Greene. The house was comj)]eted by the spring of 1829, and in 
June of that year was dedicated, the Rev. William A. Drew preach- 
ing the sermon.* Great preparation was made for the music on the 
occasion. Apollos Osgood, of Buckfield, and Horace Gould, both of 
whom enjoyed groat local celebrity as singers, Capt. John Simmons, 
of Canton, with his bass viol, and Moses Sears, of Winthrop, with 
his violin, assisted upon the occasion. The house had a capacity for 
seating four hundred persons, was of fine proportions, and was sur- 
mounted by a graceful spire. From its elevated situation it is a 
conspicuous object in the landscape from many miles around. 
Upon the final settlement of the accounts for its construction, it was 
found that the receipts from the sale of pews were seventy-two cents 
in excess of the cost of the church, and the auditors of accounts 
recommended, and the proprietors unanimously voted, "that the 
building committee be discharged from that sum." Repairs upon 
the church were made in 1839, under the direction of Ebenezer 
Hinds, Jr., Otis Pray, and Samuel P. Holman, committee. Further 
repairs Avere made in 1850, for which Otis Pray, Daniel Briggs, and 
M. M. Stone were the committee. 

After the erection of the church its pulpit was supplied by Messrs. 
Bates and Drew and the Rev. Seth Stetson until 1832. The Rev. 
Jeremiah Stoddard was the minister in 1832 and 1833, the Rev. Ja- 
bez Woodman in 1884 and 1836, Rev. George Bates in 1835. 
Rev. George W. Quimby, now editor of the Gospel Jianner, was 
settled as pastor iji 1837 and remained four years. In 1839, Rev. 
Mr. Quimby, Israel Washburn, and Clarendon Waters were a com- 
mittee to report a constitution and by-laws for the parish. Rev. 

*The venerable William A. Drew, of Augusta, for so many years proprietor and editor of 
the Gospel Banner, writes under date Jan. 10, 1874: " The church at the Norlands was dedi- 
cated June 18, 1829. It was calculated that there were over one thousand people present, 
within and around the house. The ministers present were Bros. Bates, of Livermore, Thomp- 
son, of Farmington, Murray, of Norway, Merrill, of New Gloucester, and Drew, of Augusta, 
who preached the dedicatory sermon from John ii. 16. I believe I have that sermon yet on 
hand. It was voted to have it published, but this I declined." 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



75 



Ezekiel Vose succeeded Mr. Quimby in 1840 and was pastor until 
1843, when he left, and Rev. Robert Blacker, of Norridgewock, was 
called to the pastorate, in which he continued until 1850. Rev. 
Frederic Foster was his successor until 1855. Since 1855, the 
preachers — with the exception of occasional supplies — have been 
Revs. W. R. French, D. T. Stevens, and O. H. Johnson. During 
the year 1873 extensive repairs and improvements upon the church 
were made. Changes, since the erection of this church, in the line 
of travel, in business, in the residence of the members of the parish, 
and the inconvenience of reaching the old church in the winter 
season, when the roads over the hills are filled with snow-banks, sug- 
gested, many years ago, the building of a church at the village for 
the accommodation of a large portion of the society. So, without 
any division of the parish or secession of members, but in order that 
better accommodations might be secured to many, and strength 
gained for the common parochial expenses, it was at length deter- 
mined that a new church should be built. Accordingly, in 1869, a 
handsome church with a vestry in the basement was erected. It 
was dedicated in November of that year, the Rev. Araory Battles, 
of Bangor, preaching the sermon. A fine-toned bell was hung in 
the .tower in 1870, and a good organ of sufficient power has been 
supplied by the active exertions of the ladies of the parish. 

Maj. Isaac Strickland, Col. Lee Strickland, Col. Silas Morse, Ori- 
son Rollins, Esq., Messrs. Hiram Briggs, Charles Springer, William 
Pollard, William H. Bennett, Sumner and Richard Morse, Palmer 
Elliot, Sumner Soule, N. Turner, and S. and S. Phillips were among 
the members who took an active interest in the erection of this 
church. 

Before the, division of the town, a union meeting-house, in the 
building of which the Universalists and Methodists co-operated, was 
erected in East Livermore, near Haines' Corner. It was dedicated 
Sept. 8, 1825. 



76 HISTORY OF LIVERMOKE. 



CHAPTER VII. 

CONCERNING LAWYERS AND DOCTORS. 

Notices having been made of clergymen who have liad pas- 
torates, residences, and temporary or occasional engagements to 
preach in the town, it remains to give some facts and references in 
respect to the lawyers and physicians wlio have been residents of 
the town and eiigaged in the practice of their respective professions 
therein. 

LAWYERS. 

The fii-st laAvyer who settled, in town was probably a man by the 
name of Strong, whose christian name is not remembered. His of- 
fice Avas at the inn of Abijah Monroe; but he did not remain long 
in town. He was from Vermont. 

Jonathan G. Hunton had an office at Monroe's, and was for a 
year or two in practice of the law there, dividing his time, it is be- 
lieved, between this town and Readfield, where his residence proba- 
bly was. Mr. Hunton was born in Unity, N. H., in 1781. He 
opened an office in Readfield, Kennebec County, about the year 
1807, and resided in that town until 1837, when he moved to Dix- 
mont, in the County of Penobscot. He died at Fairfield, in the 
County of Somerset, He Avas a member of the executive council in 
1829, and governor of the State in 1830, 

The next lawyer was Ezra Kingman, His office was at Mon- 
roe's, Mr. Kingman was born in B]ast Bridgewater July 20, 1789; 
commenced the study of law with Hon. William Baylies, in West 
Bridgewater, in 1806 ; was admitted to the bar, and commenced 
practice in Livermore. He returned to East Bridgewater and went 
into trade with his father; Avas a member of the legislature for six 
years and taught school six years. He Avas chosen toAvn clerk and 
treasurer Avhcn the town Avas incorporated, in 1823, continuing to 
hold the same office at intervals until his death, Feb, 13, 1852, He 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 



77 



was much esteemed and respected by his townspeojile. His sister, 
Hannah, married the Hon. Simon Greenleaf, LL. D., long a distin- 
guished lawyer in Portland, and afterwards a professor in the law 
school at Cambridge. 

Asa Kixg, a native of Vermont, wandered here from New Hamp- 
shire soon after the departure of Mr. Kingman and opened an office 
at Alonroe's. King was a man of respectable talents and attain- 
ments, but of intemperate habits. Owing to this infirmity he found 
but little encouragement in Livermore, and in a year or two moved 
to Hebron, to which goodly town his bad habits accompanied him. 

Hakry Wood, of Grafton, Mass., M'as King's successor. He came 
in 1814, and remained here in the practice of his profession about 
three years. He married a daughter of Gardner Brown, then of 
Dixfield, but afterwards of Bath. He returned to Grafton at the 
urgent request of his aged parents and was made the principal heir 
to their estate. He was a well-educated man, pleasant, social, com- 
panionable, but not a great student or much distinguished at the 
bar. His office was at the Corner. 

Richard Belcher followed Wood and was here in 1817. He re- 
mained about two years, when he removed to Winthrop. He after- 
wards resided in Freeport and Waldoboro. His place of business 
was at North Livermore, or the Corner, as it was called. 

Reuel Washburn (a younger brother of Israel Washburn), 
who was born in Raynham, Mass., May 21, 1793, and grad- 
uated at Brown University in the class of 1814, read law with 
the late Hon. Albion K. Parris, at Paris, and was admitted 
to the bar in 1818. He opened an office soon afterwards at the 
Corner in Livermore, and has resided there ever since, with the ex- 
ception of a residence for about a year — in 1851 and 1852 — in Osh- 
kosh, Wisconsin. He did a good business in his profession for many 
years, especially in conveyancing, drawing wills, and making collec- 
tions. His great carefulness and integrity, as well as his accurate 
legal knowledge, secured to him the confidence of the community in 
an especial manner. In contested questions, also, he was much 
trusted, for few men prepared their cases more thorougly or tried 
them moi-e wisely than he. He was register of probate from 1821 
to 1823, senator from Oxford County in 1828 and 1829, and execu- 
tive councillor in 1830. He was elected to congress in 1829, but 
was deprived of his seat by the counting against him of five votes, 
which had been given to other persons for other offices, but which, 



78 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

under the system of voting at that time in force, of pLacing the votes 
in separate boxes, were, by mistake, deposited in the box used for 
receiving votes for representative to congress instead of that used 
for receiving votes for senator, as was intended. As illustrating the 
recklessness of party spirit at that day, and indicating the low tone 
of political morals at that time, the facts in this case will be given 
in detail : 

According to the official count of the votes as returned to the 
governor and council, Mr. Washburn lacked five votes of a major- 
ity. In those days it was not necessary to express uj^on the 
ballot the office for which the candidate was voted for; but the se- 
lectmen held separate boxes for as many officers as were voted for. 
For example, a box for governor, another for senators, and still an- 
other for town representative, etc. In the town of Canton, Otis Hay- 
ford, Esq., made a mistake by casting a senatorial ballot, with the 
names of George French and Nathaniel Howe upon it, into the box for 
representative to congress. He discovered his mistake the very mo- 
ment the ballot dropped from his hand and asked permission of 
the selectmen to correct it. but was refused. This senatorial ballot 
should have been rejected as illegal and void, as all blank ballots are 
rejected, because it is impossible to tell who was intended to be 
voted for, and no voter has a right to cast more than one ballot for 
the same officer. But this illegal senatorial ballot was counted and 
returned as tioo separate votes. Thus, Mr. Ilayford was compelled 
to carry two votes against the candidate he intended to vote for. 

Bridgton, in the County of Cumberland, belonged to this con- 
gressional district. In this town a senatorial ballot, with three 
names upon it, by mistake in the same way, was put into the box for 
representative to congress, and was counted and returned as three 
separate votes. If these two illegal senatorial ballots had been 
rejected, then there would have been a choice. These fjicts were 
proved before the committee on elections and were not disputed, but 
a partisan house of rej^resentatives denied Mr. Washburn his seat, 
deciding that no election had been made. It seems incredible at 
this time that party spirit could go so f;ir as to defeat an election on 
such grounds as these, and it is to the honor of the age, and a wit- 
ness to its \^%t improvement over the last generation, that such an 
act of palpable injustice would not now be attempted or tolerated by 
any political party — or defended by any partisan, however bitter or 
unscrupulous he might be. 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 



79 



Mr. Wnsliburn was a representative from Livermore in the legisla- 
ture for the years 1832, 1833, 1834, 1835, and 1841. He has held, 
also, many municipal oflices and was judge of probate for Andro- 
scoggin County from 1857 to 1859, when he resigned the office. Pie 
lias continued in the practice of the law for hfty-six years and is 
still consulted and employed in his profession. His children are 
iianem W., who was graduated at Bowdoin College, in 1845, and 
educated to the bar; he was a lawyer in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and 
for several years was ju<lge of the circuit court of that State ; 
Alonzo, who has resided many years in the west; Seth D., a lawyer 
in Livermore; he married in March, 1870, Julia, daughter of Job 
Chase, Esq; Harriet, unmarried, and Ellen, the wife of Dr. Roscoe 
Smith, of Turner. 

Barzillai Streeter had an office at the village for a short time 
prior to 1840 ; but his character and habits were not such as to se- 
cure the confidence or respect of the people. 

William A. Evaxs, a brother of Hon. George Evans, was in the 
practice of the law at the Falls for several years before the division 
of the town. He is now at Fort Fairfield, Aroostook County. 

Grove Catlix was at the Falls after Mr. Evans left, before the 
organization of the new town, as well as afterwards. 

PHYSICIANS. 
Until the year 1795 the people had been dependent upon physi- 
cians in the towns of Winthrop and Turner; but the population 
had increased and become so large that they felt that it was unnec- 
essary longer to submit to this inconvenience, and efforts were made 
to find a man of good character and ability in his profession, and in- 
duce him to make his home in the new town. Among the candi- 
dates who presented themselves were Dr. Cyrus Hamlin, of 
Harvard, Mass., a young man, then but recently admitted to the 
profession, and another, whose name is not recalled, but who was 
said to have received the preference of Deacon Livermore, at a citi- 
zens' meeting called to decide the question, "Who shall be our doc- 
tor?" But the voice of the majority was in fovor of Dr. Hamlin, 
and he paid off the deacon for his error of judgment by, a year or 
two afterwards, marrying his daughter. The action of this meeting 
was followed up by the preparation of a paper by the Rev. Sylvanus 



80 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 



Boardman, tlie Bajitist minister, which was signed by some of the 
principal inhabitants, and of which a copy is given below: 

" Whereas tlie town of Livermore is destitute of a physician, and 
as the inhabitants are subject to great inconveniences on account of 
the distance they have to travel in order to procure one, and being 
informed by Dr. Hamlin that he contemplates settling in said town, 
and wishes to know the minds of the people in this respect, we, the 
subscribers, hereby testify that it is ngreeable to our wishes that he 
should settle with us, and tliat we Avill contribute all that we can, 
consistently, to his encouragement so far as his prudent conduct and 
skill in liis profession shall commend him to our esteem. 

Sylvanus Boardmax. 

Ransom Norton. 

William Hurd. 
Livermore, Sept. 1, 1795. Isaac Livermore." 

The original paper (with the exception of some of the names 
which have been torn off) is in the possession of Dr. Hamlin's 
daughter, Vesta, the widow of the late Dr. Job Holmes, of Calais. 

It may be added, that the people of the town of svifficient abil- 
ity agreed to board the doctor and his horse for one year gratuitous- 
ly. Dr. Hamlin resided in Livermore till 1805, having a large 
practice as a physician and enjoying the confidence of the people. He 
bought a form of Gen. Learned, near to that occupied by the latter, 
in what was then, practically, the center of the town, and upon its 
principal thoroughfare, and erected thereon a large and convenient 
two-storied house. It was a spot of exceedingly great natural 
beauty which the doctor selected for his home, and it was made 
more pleasant by the good taste which prompted him and Gen. 
Leai-ned to plant a long row of elm trees u])on the line of the road 
between their residences, which grew amain and long ago became 
stately and beautiful. So long as these grand old trees shall stand 
and flourish they should keep the names of those who planted them 
in fresh and grateful remembrance. 

When the County of Oxford was incorporated, it found Gen. 
Learned and Dr. Hamlin among its most prominent and able men, 
and they were naturally selected for its principal ofiicers. The 
former was made sheriff and the latter clerk of the courts for the 
new county. But while Gen. Learned's office permitted him to con- 
tinue his residence in Livermore, Dr. Hamlin's required his removal 



HISTORY OF LivErv:\ror.E. 81 

to the sliirc town. And so, in this year, he sohl liis prf]tcvty in 
Livc'i-niore and removed to P.'U'is. Pie was atterwards slieiitl^" ot tlic 
county. He died Feb. 2, 1829. Dr. Hamlin married on tlie fourth 
of December, 1797, Anna, daughter of Dea. Elijali Livermore. She 
surA-ived him many years, dying Aug. 25, 1852. Tlieir cliihh-en were 
Elijah Livermore (a son of tlie same name liad died in infancy the 
year, before), Cyrus, Elizn, Anna, Vesta. Hannibal, and Hannah. 
Elijah was born in Livermore March 29, 1800, graduated at Brown 
Univeisity 1819, and practiced hnv for several years at Columbia, in 
the County of Washington. During his residence in this county he 
was .1 representative in the legislature from his town, and also a 
State senator. He moved to Bangor in the year 1835, and resided 
there until his death, July 16, 1872. While a resident of Bangor 
he was a member of both branches of the legislature of Maine, and 
land agent lor the State for the years 1838 and 1841. He was also 
a mend:)er of the executive council of the State, and mayor of the 
city of Bangor. In 1848 and 1849 he was the whig candidate for 
governor, and was commissioner under the treaty with Great Britain 
of 1854 to define the fishing limits between the two countries. The 
Maine Historical Society lost in his demise one of its most valuable 
and esteemed members. The remark made by Dr. Bond, in his 
" Genealogies," in reference to his grandfather (and who he is said 
to have resembled, especially in the fine vein of humor which made 
liis society so delightful) is applicable to IMr. Hamlin, viz.: "He was 
a man of great Avorth." Cyrus, born in Livermore July 16, 1802, 
was educated for the medical profession, and received his degree of 
M. D. at Bowdoin in 1828. He settled in Calais, and died at Gal- 
A'cston, Texas, whither he had gone for the benefit of his health, 
jVIay, 1839. ^ift'^a, born April 4, 1804, was unmarried. Anna, horn 
July 14, 1805, married Hon. Daniel Brown, of Waterford, whom she 
survives. She now resides in Paris. Vesta, Avho was born June 6, 
1808, married Dr. Job Holmes, of Calais, jM. D. Bowdoin College, 
1826. Dr. Holmes settled in Calais and died there a few yeai-s 
since. Hannibal (LL. D.), was born in Paris Aug. 27, 1809, settled 
in Hampden, Penobscot County, as a lawyer, but resides now in 
Bangor. He was a member of the legislature of Maine in 1836, 
1837, 1838, 1839, 1840, and 1847, presiding as speaker of the house 
of representatives in 1837, 1839, 1840; a representative from Maine 
in the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth congresses ; governor of 
Maine in 1857 ; vice-president of the United States from 1861 to 



82 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



1865 ; collector of the port of Boston in 18G5 and 1866; U. S. sen- 
ator, elected (1848) for four years to fill a vacancy, and subsequent- 
ly elected for three full terms; aid-de-camp of Governor Fairfield ; 
commissioner of schools for the County of Penobscot, and commis- 
sioner of the Stnte of Maine in 1861 and 1862 in respect to her 
fortifications, Hcmmtli Livermore^ born 1814, married Dr. Thomas 
B. Townsend, M. D. Bowdoin College, Avho died soon after his mar- 
ri.'ige, 

Dk. Cornelius Holland was in the practice of his profession as 
a jjhysician for a few years after 1805. His home was at Monroe's. 
He finally settled at Jay (now Canton) Point, where he had an ex- 
tensive jiriictice. He <lied 1871, at an advanced age. He was twice 
elected to congress from the Oxford district. 

When Dr. Hamlin removed to Paris he was succeeded by Dr. 
Bp:njamin Prescott, a son-in-law of Gen. John Chandler, of Mon- 
mouth. Dr. Prescott was a native of Winthrop, and had a good 
reputation in his profession. 

In 1809, he sold his house to Dr. Benjamin Bradford, and set- 
tled in Dresden, Me., and afterwards moved to Bath. Dr. Bradford 
moved to Livermore in August of that year, where he resided till 
his death in May, 1864, at the age of eighty years. He was the son 
of Chandler Bi-adford, of Tui'ner. As a ])hysician, he was careful 
and judicious and had a large practice; as a man, he was genial, 
wise, ami of rare humor; as a citizen, useful and honored. He Avas 
for several years a member of the Maine legislature from Livermore, 
and in 1841 was a member of the executive council. He Avas much 
esteemed by Governors Lincoln and Kent, witli whom he was in in- 
timate relations, fur his good sense and admirable colloquial powers. 
He was the treasurer of the town for fifty-one consecutive years. 
Dr. Bond, in his letter quoted elsewhere, speaks of him in terms at 
once api)reciative and just. He married Martha Bisbee, whom he 
survived (she having died in 1863), and by whom he had a family of 
thirteen chihlren, of Avhom the following survived him: Flora^ 
Avidow of Merritt Coolidge, Esq., a merchant of Portland; Osca^ 
Avidovv of John W. BigeloAV, Esq., of Livermore ; Celia, wife of 
Maj. Elisha Coolidge, of Jay; Henry Bond, farmer, Avho resides on 
the old place, and two years after the death of his father was elected 
town treasurer, which oflice he has held ever since; Martha, Avife of 
Joseph Locke, Avho lives in Minnesota ; Algernon Sidney, a fanner, 
Avho also lives in Minnesota. 



HISTOTIY OF LIVERMORE. 



83 



The old social library, which, for many years, furnished excellent 
reading to the families of the subscribers, was kept at Dr. Brad- 
ford's. There were in it a goodly number of valuable books, largely 
histories and travels — as Hume, Robertson, Marshall, Gordon, 
Bruce, Brydone, and Lady Mary Wortley Montague. There were 
also on its shelves Goldsmith's works, including " The Earth and 
Animated Nature;" The Spectator, in eight volumes, and other 
books of the best kinds. The modern novel had no place there, but 
the works of Cervantes and Le Sage were on its catalogue, and not 
seldom in the hands of its j^atrons; and the doctor had a private 
library — to which his neighbors had access — not large, but miich 
read. A man of quiet but excellent humor, he had no books which 
he read oftener or enjoyed more than tlie works of Laurence Sterne, 
Dean Swift's Tale of a Tub, Knickerbocker's History of New York, 
and the poems of Peter Pindar and George Colman. Tristram 
Shandy furnished an inexhaustible resoui'ce for quotation and illus- 
tration. Dr. Bradford was pretty regularly supplied by Rufus Pray, 
then a law student in New York, with Noah's Advocate, and his 
neighbor, the storekeeper — whose love of reading possibly exceeded 
liis interest in the shop, and who found more pleasure, it may be ven- 
tured to say, in Burns' poems than in day-book or ledger — was a sub- 
scriber to the JVeio England Galaxy, edited by Joseph T. Buckingham. 
In good things and bright sayings these papers led all others in the- 
country. If Noah excelled in humor, Buckingham was unrivalled 
in satire. His "attentions" to Alexis Eustapheive, the Russian con- 
sul at Boston, and to the Rev. John Newland Maffit, with his Brom- 
field Street pranks, afforded these neighbors infinite amusement. 

To see one of them approaching the house of the other on a 
stormy day, when the session might be long and uninterrupted, gave 
unbounded pleasure to the young people of the favored household, 
who iinderstood well what was coming — the news of the day, the 
funny sayings of Noah, the sharp ones of Buckingham, the anecdote 
never stale however often repeated, the freshest joke of the neigh- 
borhood, the body-shaking laugh of the genial doctor, the more ex- 
plosive one of his companion — and with these, at not infrequent 
intervals, discourse on higher themes, earnest discussions of topics 
political, religious, literary, and social, wlien Algernon Sidney, 
Burke, Jefferson, Archbishop Tillotson, William VYhiston, Dr. 
Priestley, Jonathan Mayhcw, the dialogues of Elhanan Winchester, 



84 HISTORY OF LIVETIMORE. 

Addison, Goldsmltli, or Dr. Johnson, were quoted and commented 
on. 

Sometimes Capt. Kendall and, perchance, Capts. Waters and Pray 
were present also, and at such times the discourse was more likely 
to be political, when State matters and public men were discussed 
with rare intelligence and the freedom that became independent 
thinkers. At one time, the theme might be the Missouri comprom- 
ise and John Holmes' connection with it, or the separation of Maine 
from Massachusetts with references to Mr. Holmes' theory of " five- 
ninths;" at another, it would be the controversies of the Bucktails 
and the Clintonians in New York, or the "era of good feeling," 
heralding the election of Dr. Eustis as governor of Massachusetts ; 
again, it would refer to the Panama mission, and later to the north- 
eastern boundary qnestion, and the lal)ors of their honored friend, 
P]noch Lincoln, the chivalrous governor, whose love of Maine was 
so earnest and so touching. Previous to the new departure at the 
close of Mr. Monroe's administration, the doctor, the storekeeper, 
and Capt. Waters had been republicans, and the other captains, fed- 
eralists; but they came together in the support of John Quincy 
Adams, for president, against Mr. Crawford in 1824, and Gen. Jack- 
son in 1828, and were never afterwards divided in their political 
views or party atfiliations. 

When theology or religion was the topic, as was not schhjm the 
case, it needed no great discei-nment to discover that they were all 
stanch adherents of the Broad Church, reverent in feeling, and apt 
and valiant in the maintenance of its views and doctrines. 

Of these neighbors, since the recent decease of Capt. Pray at the 
age of eighty-five years and twelve days, one only — the venerable 
Israel Washburn, the storekeeper and long-time magistrate — re- 
mains. While he is nearly blind from the efiect of cataracts, which 
began to be a source of inconvenience about fifteen years ago, his 
general health is excellent, and his memory, at almost fourscore and 
ten, is remarkr.bly active and distinct, covering things new and old, 
and small as well as great, so thoroughly that it would seem no 
event or anecdote of which he ever had knowledge — from the day 
when a boy of five years he advocated the adoption of the federal 
C(mstitution, against Daniel Wilbur, to the general election in 1872, 
in wliich he took a lively interest — had escaped its marvellous grasp. 

Timothy Howe was a well-educated physician and a man of 
much intelligence. He came to Livermore in 1814, or perhaps earli- 



HISTORY OF LIYEEMOEE, 



85 



er. In November of that year lie Avas member of a committee to 
petition the legislature. He lived at the village in 1816, and soon 
afterwards moved to Turner, where he passed the rest of his life. 
His son, Timothy 0. Iloioe, was born in Livermore Feb. 24, 1816. 
He was educated to the bar, settled in Readfield, Kennebec County, 
and represented that town in the State legislature in 1845. He em- 
igrated to Wisconsin soon afterwards, and settled at Green Bay, 
where he practiced law with success, and was judge of the circuit 
and supreme courts from 1850 until his resignation in 1855. In 
1861 he was elected, and in 1867 and 1873 re-elected, to the United 
States senate. He married a daughter of Francis F. Haines, Esq., 
of East Livermore. Z. 11. Howe., postmaster at Monroe, Wis., is 
also a son of Dr. Timothy Howe. 

Previous to the division of the town. Dr. William Snow, Dr. 
Charles Millett, Dr. William B. Small, Dr. William Cart 
(father of Annie Louisa Cary, the great vocalist), and perhaps 
others were in practice on the east side of the river. 

De; S. B. Morrison" was in jDractice at the village for several 
years. Since his removal Drs. Barnard, William Drown, Al- 
bert L. Fbye, J. W. Bridgham, John Ladd, and I. C. Dunham 
have been physicians in the town. 
7 



86 HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



CHAPTER VIII. 

NOTES MISCELLANEOUS. 

Fkee Masons. — Preliminary steps towards the organization of a 
Lodge of Masons were taken in March, 1811, and as early as the second 
day of July of that year intelligence was received that the Grand 
Lodge of Massachusetts had .granted the petitioners a charter, convey- 
ing full powers as a Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons, by tlie name 
of Omental Star Lodge, No. 21, At a meeting Apiil 21, 1812, the 
charter, bearing date June IB, 1811, and of masonry 5,811, signed 
by Timothy Bigelow, Grand Master, Francis -J. Oliver, Senior Grand 
Warden, Benjamin Russell, Junior Grand Warden, John Proctor, 
Grand Secretary, Andrew Sigourney, Grand Treasurer, was re- 
ceived. At this meeting the following officers of the Lodge were 
chosen, viz. : Samuel Small, Master ; William H. Brettun, Senior 
Wai'den ; Simeon Waters, Junior Warden ; Jesse Stone, Treasurer ; 
Sylvester Strickland, Secretary. Aug. 28, 1816, "the Lodge was 
duly constituted and solemnly consecrated, according to the ancient 
usages of Masons, by the M. W. Grand Lodge of Massachusetts." 
A hall for its accommodation was built at the Corner in 1818. An 
act of incorporation granting the right to hold real and personal es- 
tate was passed by the legislature Feb. 10, 1823. VVhile the Lodge 
was kept in working order and officers were generally elected from 
year to year, no work was done from February, 1829, to December, 
1843. After the period of inaction, superinduced by the Morgan 
excitement, had passed, the Lodge awoke to new life, and has since 
enjoyed a satisfactory degree of prosperity. Many of the best citi- 
zens of Liverinore and neighboring towns have been connected with 
it. 

In a compendious and model History of the Lodge, recently pub- 
lished, prepared by Hon. Reuel Washburn, a long-time member, and 
P. G. M. of the Grand Lodge of Maine, some notices are given of 
the original members. It is therein said that Samuel Small was by 
profession a physician, who in the prime of life had an extensive 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 



87 



practice and the confidence of his patients, and who as a man had 
the respect of his fellow-citizens; that he served his adopted town 
in the legislatures of Massachusetts and Maine, and tlie County of 
Oxford in the senate of Massachusetts and of Maine, and was also a 
member of the executive council. As a Mason he was a devoted 
friend, and well posted in the lectures and work. He died at the 
age of eighty-three years. Oriental Star Lodge have great reason 
to respect his memory. Others are mentioned as follows: 

"William Henry Brettun was an active business man, who 
amassed a large property. 

Simeon Waters was a saddle and harness maker by trade, but 
has always given some attention to farming. He has been several 
times elected representative from the town of Livermore in the leg- 
islature of Massachusetts. 

Sylvester Strickland was a trader and merchant. 

Oliver Pollard was a trader and innholder. 

Isaac Livermore was a well-educated gentleman — lived on a farm 
— health feeble — could not do much labor, but was poj^ular as a 
magistrate, and did considerable business in that line. 

Libeus Leach was a farmer. 

Ithamar Phinney was a farmer. 

James Johnston was a foreigner, an Irishman, engaged in farming. 
He had a diploma duly authenticated by the Grand Lodge of Ire- 
land. 

Isaac Root was a minister of the gospel. 

James Waite was ar blacksmith. 

Aaron S. Barton was a housewright. 

Jesse Stone was a tanner and innholder — very much beloved. 

Dexter Walker Avas a farmer and deputy-sheriff. 

Cornelius Holland was a physician with large practice. He has 
had the confidence of his constituents in a high degree. Has been 
twice elected to the senate of Maine from Oxford County, and twice 
elected representative in the congress of the United States from the 
same county. He was also a member of the convention that framed 
our State constitution, and represented the town of Canton the first 
two sessions of the legislature." 

Dr. Small was a resident of Jay, as were Rev. Moses Stone, Still- 
man Noyes and Joseph Covill, Esqs., gentlemen of great worth and 
respectability, and active Masons, whose loss was sincerely mourned 
by their brethren and their fellow-citizens generally. 



88 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

Dr. Holland was of Canton. This "venerable and much respected 
brother died at his late residence" on the second of June, 1870, aged 
eighty-six years, ten months, and twenty-four days. 

MINISTERIAL AND SCHOOL FUNDS. 
The lands reserved in tlie grant of the town for ministerial and 
school purposes were sold many years ago, and the proceeds were 
placed in the charge of trustees. The interest on these funds may 
be used from year to year. Upon the division of the town, the pro- 
portion equitably belonging to East Livermore was paid over to that 
town. The income of the ministerial fund is apportioned annually 
to the several religious societies, according to the dii-ection given by 
the legal voters to the assesssors. 

POSTMASTERS AND MAIL CARRIERS. 

The first postmaster in town was Dr. Benjamin Prescott, and the 
next was Dr. Benjamin Bradford. When, about 1830, Dr. Bradford 
removed to the farm Avhich he had purchased of Alexander Kincaid, 
Isaac Strickland was appointed postmaster, and after he had held 
the office for a few years it was removed to the village, where it has 
since been kept, and where there have been several postmasters, the 
pi'esent being G. T. Piper. 

Offices were subsequently established at North Livermore, Liver- 
more Center, and South Livermore. Reuel Washburn was the first 
postmaster at North Livermore ; Jesse Stone the second; the post- 
master at this time is Roscoe Coding. The postmaster at Liver- 
more Center is John Bigelow ; at South Livermore, Job Chase. 

The first mail carrier (1806) was Josiah Smith. His route was 
from Portland, via New Gloucester and Turner, to Livermore, re- 
turning by way of Hartford, Buckfield, and Paris, and making the 
round trip once a Aveek. Previous to this time John Walker had 
for many years visited Portland weekly, as a sort of expressman, 
carrying and bringing packages, doing errands, and taking and 
bringing letters to and from the nearest post-office on his route. 

A post route was established, after the close of the war of 1812, 
from Readfield, by way of Livermore, to Farmington, and Jedediah 
White was the first post rider thereon. In 1826, a route from 
Brunswick was established, and "post" Chase was the first carrier 
of the mails on it. For two years previous to this time, Joseph 
Griffin, of Brunswick, had maintained a mail route from Brunswick 



HISTOKY OF LIVERMOEE. 89 

to Jay, principally for the distribiitioa of the 3£aine Baptist Herald^ 
of which he was the publisher. The Readfield and Farmington line 
was discontinued before 1830, and routes opened and mails put on 
which supplied its place. One route was from Augusta to Dixfield ; 
another was from Portland to Farmington, on both of which the 
mails were taken in coaches, or stages, as they were called. 

CENTENARIANS. 

Although there have been a good many men and women in town 
who have lived to be more than ninety years old, only two have 
reached an age not bounded by a century of years. Tliey are Capt. 
David Hinklet, and Sarah, widow of Jesse Kidder. Capt. 
Hinkley was born in Bath, Me., Jan. 8, 1766. His father moved to 
Hallowell and settled ou Hinkley's plain — from whom it derived its 
name — in 1775. Capt. Hinkley well remembered the passing of 
Arnold's expedition, in September of that year, up the Kennebec 
en route to Quebec. This occurrence was the more distinctly im- 
pressed upon his memory, from the fact that a fine patch of water- 
melons, which he had himself planted, was robbed by Arnold's men. 
He settled in Livermore in 1805, and died here December, 1867, 
having reached the great age, lacking a few days, of one hundred 
and two years. He voted for Washington for president at the first 
election under the constitution, being then twenty-three years old, 
and he voted at every subsequent presidential election that was held 
during his life. His last presidential vote was for Abraham Lincoln 
in 1864. Tlie following notes referring to Capt. Hinkley and his 
times are copied from the journal of a family residing in Livermore : 

" He was an intelligjent man and a o:ood citizen. He voted for 
Washington at the first election of president under the constitution, 
and voted at every presidential election since. In September last 
(1867) he rode six miles to vote for Governor Chamberlain, and 
a few days before he died expressed a hope that he might live to 
vote for Gen. Grant for president. 

Benjamin Franklin was in the vigor of his years, and George 
Washington was a young man of thirty-four, when Capt. Hinkley 
was born. Wolfe had fallen at Quebec but a little more than six 
years before, and Gray's Elegy, which Wolfe recited the night before 
he fell, had just been published. Dr. Johnson was maintaining that 
taxation was no tyranny, and the first Pitt was still the grandest 
figure in the house of lords. 



90 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



How much came to pass, how many things were done, within the 
limits bounded by the life of this venerable man! Will the little 
one of to-day, who shall live till 1967, see as much accomplished 
within his time? Will he measure improvement in morals, progress 
in science, art, literature, in religious ideas, in government, in mate- 
rial helps, equal to those witnessed in the lifetime of Capt. Hink- 
ley ? Will the turnpike, the steamboat, the railroad, the photograph, 
the telegraph, be superseded by achievements as much greater than 
they as they are better than what they displaced? Will our chil- 
dren travel from Livermore to the 'Hub' in half an hour, and from 
the 'Hub' to the moon in half a day?" 

Mrs. Kidder, daughter of Dea. Ebenezer Humphrey, a prominent 
citizen of Oxford, Mass., was born Oct. 30, 1771. She married Jesse 
Kidder of the same town. They came to Livermore in 1802, to 
which place her brother, Peter Humphrey, had previously moved. 
They settled on the form under the hill about half a mile west of 
that of Gen. Learned, and where Mr. Kidder died in August, 1857. 
Mrs. Kidder is now (1874) living with John White, whose wife is a 
distant relative, upon the farm on which she has resided for more 
than seventy years. She is very deaf, but although in her one hun- 
dred and third year her health is remarkably good, and her face 
smooth and fair as a girl's. 

FERRIES. 

The first ferry opened was below the farm now owned by Col. 
Lewis Hunton, in the neighborhood of Tolia walla. It was called 
Wing's Ferry. In a few years it was ajiparent that it Avas not on 
the line of any of the principal highways necessary for the accom- 
modation of the residents of the town, and it was abandoned, and 
a ferry, formerly Fuller's but now called Hillman's Ferry, was 
established at the Intervale, Another ferry was opened below and 
near the Falls, and yet another at Lieut. Benjamin's. This last- 
named ferry was discontinued some forty years ago, and a ferry was 
opened in the southerly part of Tollawalla, called first Norris' and 
afterwards Strickland's Ferry. The Androscoggin, being a river 
that rises rapidly and to a great height in freshets, and the cross- 
ings being unfavorable for the maintenance of bridges on the line of 
the principal highways, no bridge was erected across the river Avith- 
in the town until about 1850, when one was built at the Falls. It 
was carried oW in the freshet of 1870, but was rebuilt in 1872. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 91 

KAILROADS. 

There is no railroad in Livermore, but the Androscoggin Rail- 
road, now a branch of tlie Maine Central Railroad, extending from 
Leeds Junction to Farmington, runs upon the East Livermore side 
of the river the entire length of the former town, and near its east- 
ern boundary. A charter, however, has been obtained for a road to 
extend from Lewiston, via Auburn, North Auburn, Turner, North 
Turner, Livermore, Canton, and Dixfield, to Rumford Falls. This 
road, as far at least as Livermore, is likely to be built at an early 
day. Traversing a productive farming territory and passing sevei'al 
thriving villages, as this road will, when built, it will constitute an 
important and valuable feeder to whichever of the roads leading 
rom Lewiston to Portland it shall be connected with. Whether it 
shall be united with the Maine Central road or with the Grand 
Trunk road, a branch will doubtless be built from Livermore vil- 
lage to the Falls. 

CHANGES— THE SITUATIOlSr. 

The town is no longer in many respects what it was thirty or 
forty years ago. Its families have changed ; old ^miliar names ai'e 
no longer familiar; old customs, habits, and ways of working, 
thinking, and speaking have passed away, and new ones have taken 
their places. Much that could not well be spared has been lost. 
The era of the picturesque, the humorous — it will not do, remem- 
bering the civil war, to say the chivalrous — is perhaps past. The 
shoemaker, and his poor relation, the cobbler, the traveling tailor and 
seamstress, the fulling-mill and carding machine, the "potash," the 
quilting, the husking, the paring bee, and, it may be feared, the 
spelling school, are things of history, and seldom anything more. 
They have felt the inevitable law ; but his claims to be a philosopher 
will not be readily admitted who denies that the operation, of this 
law is on the whole for improvement and progress, and for improve- 
ment and progress here in Livermore as well as elsewhere. Doubt- 
less, the emigration to other places of so many active and intelligent 
young men and women as the town has spared in these later years 
is, in many respects, to be regretted; but there are considerations 
which will not be overlooked whenever the subject of Ihese losses is 
presented, and which will suggest that they are not wholly irrepara- 
ble. The exodus of young men from the town has been materially 
repaired by the introduction of labor-saving implements and expedi- 



9.2 HISTOEY OF LIVEEMOEE. 

ents, and especially by railroads. The annual jDroduct, though 
varied in kind somewhat from what it was forty years ago, is as con- 
siderable in amount, and of greatly increased value, whether meas- 
ured in money or by its power to purchase commodities of necessity, 
convenience, and luxury. 

The practice of the farmer now is to sell at home for cash, and 
many articles which formerly had no marketable value now yield a 
handsome profit. Formerly, the markets were Hallowell, Bath, and 
Portland, principally the last. The average farmer would, in the 
course of a winter, go to market three or four times. His pung, 
drawn by a single horse, would take a load of eight or nine hundred 
pounds, and the trip would occupy, if the last-named towns were 
the markets visited, three days. A dressed hog, a tub or two of 
butter, half a dozen cheeses, a keg of cider api^le-sauce, a hundred 
pounds of dried apples, and perhaps a few chickens or turkeys 
would fjrm a not unusual assortment, and would make a reasonable 
load for a single horse to draw over a highway so uneven and snow- 
blocked as the farmer would be likely to find. The contents of his 
pung Avould, ordinarily, bring him not over fifty dollars, half in cash 
and half in goods. The money paid out on the trip would be not 
far from three dollars. Net result : cash, $22.00 ; goods, barter 
price, 125.00, cash price, $20.00=142.00. To-day the same articles 
would yield him at his door at least $125.00 cash. But the change 
to the farmer's advantage does not stop here. Not only does he re- 
ceive nearly three dollars where forty years ago he received one, for 
such products of the farm as have been mentioned, but other prod- 
ucts, which at that time had no sale, because they would not bear 
transportation, are now important sources of income. Potatoes, ap- 
ples, and green corn for canning may be mentioned in this category. 
It is a poor yield that does not give more than one hundred bushels 
of potatoes to the acre, and an exceptional year when they cannot 
be sold on the farm or at the neighboring station for fifty cents a 
bushel. Apples, which are cheaply and extensively raised, are 
worth from two to five dollars a barrel at home — an average for ten 
years not falling below three dollars. Green corn, where a canning 
house is not too far oif, will return a j^rofit of fifty dollars to the 
acre; it sometimes yields a hundred. 

Compare these returns with the best the firmer knew when Enoch 
Lincoln was governor, or with the best the firmer in Wisconsin, 
Iowa, or Minnesota realizes to-day, and it will be seen how little 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



93 



real occasion our industrious farmers have for complaining of their 
lot. Forty years ago the majority of the farmers were in debt and 
in frequent correspondence with attorneys and deputy-sheriifs. 
Now, a farmer in debt is the exception. The rule is that he has 
government bonds, a deposit in a savings bank, or a permanent in- 
vestment in Northern Pacific, or some other western, railroad obli- 
gation. 

It is, unfortunately, true that in too many instances he has failed 
to invest his surplus funds, " where they would do most good" — in 
his farm, fences, and buildings. But he may comfort himself, if he 
has sufficient philosophy or patriotism, with the reflection that what 
he has robbed his farm of has gone to build railroads and cities in 
distant States and that, though the sight of his money shall never 
again gladden his eyes, it has not been wholly lost to the country. 

But, notwithstanding these mistakes, this farmer is better off than 
his father or grandfather was, and would not wisely exchange places 
with any other in the east or in the west. Thirty millions of dollars 
in the savings banks of the State, and a sum still larger in other 
sound investments, by those whom he, and men of toil in other lines, 
represent, is not a showing that implies pauperism in our rural dis- 
tricts, or postulates their early and complete desertion. 

But Avith 'these gains of the modern farmer he must submit to one 
loss, serious and irremediable — the old-time marketings, so packed 
with fun, frolic, and Jceen enjoyment, when a dozen neighbors would 
set out in company with their train of pungs for the market town. 
The cold might be piercing, the winds boisterous, and the roads 
filled with drifts, but sooner or later the Avayside inn, with its glow- 
ing hearthstone and its ruby landlord, was reached ; the horses were 
carefully blanketed and fed ; their drivers, who were their owners, 
were seated around the blazing fire, raiding with unaffected sharp- 
ness upon the doughnuts and other contents of their "mitchin" 
boxes, while the genial warmth of the chimney, assisted, perhaps, by 
sometliing comfortable from the "bar," would elicit from Capt. 
Leavitt the admission that it was "moderating;" to which the bluff 
and hearty host would respond: " Hang it, Leavitt, were you ever 
here when it didn't mo^era^e?" and the echoing laugh, the joke — 
the story, whose humor was keen and true — went round, until the 
time for dejxarture was at hand when the frugal bills were paid, coats 
were buttoned, comforters adjusted, and hearty "good-byes" said 
by guests and host. 



94 



HISTORY OF LTVEEMORE. 



The variety store, at the Mills, the Corner, or the Hillside, is no 
longer the attraction — at once shop, exchange, and loafer's retreat — 
that it was formerly ; the lawyer has ceased to be counsellor, men- 
tor, oracle ; and the doctor, who was so wise as to be looked up to 
with admiration bordering u])on awe, walks with his neighbors, side 
by side, in the light of common day. There shines no more, at 
night, the cheerful taper in the tiny window of the shoemakers tiny 
shop, and the fires of the blacksmith, in more than half the forges 
where years ago they were wont to burn, have been extinguished, 
never to be rekindled. The unity and solidarity of the town — its 
independence, its sufficiency within itself for almost every occasion 
and every need, and the society which these conditions j^roduced — 
are things that Avere. Men grieve that they can be no more; and 
then, in healthier mood, they ask themselves whether, if they could, 
they would bring them back at the expense of the things by which 
they have been supplanted or succeeded. 

No longer isolated and self-dependent, the people reach to and 
feel the world without, and the world without touches and visits 
them. Commodities, manners, and modes of thought are ex- 
changed, and the free circulation improves and benefits both 
parties — twice blessed, like the quality of mercy. The hats, 
boots, and coats of men, the dresses and bonnets of women, 
are at once better, cheaper, and more comely and tasteful 
than they were when they were fiishioned and wrought at home. 
The taste is educated ; the thrifty farmer is no mere boor, and if he 
wants something of the ease of the city, he makes it up by superior 
intelligence. The way is opened for every man to do the best the 
thing he can the best do. And woman, too, is no longer shut out 
from the occupations and competitions of the world. Her right to 
labor and grow strong, wise, useful, and beautiful finds room to 
express itself under these new conditions as it could never find be- 
fore. And thus, under the combined influence of the division of 
occupations and the commingling of individuals, of the separation 
of industries and the intertwining of interests, the world's work of 
material development, of social gain, of culture and civilization goes 
on, and the town's work, too. 

If three or four farms, each unprofitable when managed and 
worked for the usual variety of crops, being adapted to only one or 
two kinds, are united to make one large sheep or dairy farm, and are 
worked with profit, the town surely loses nothing by the change, un- 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



95 



less the decrease of its pauper list be deemed a loss. The self-sus- 
taining, profitable form requires in the end more hands, affords 
better wages, and educates to higher skill than the half dozen 
starveling homes could do. This process of sorting and sifting; this 
policy of giving farms over to the crops or uses for which they are 
best adapted, of finding out Avhat they were made for and respecting 
the answer, of treating natui'e as an ally rather than as an enemy, 
are going on and will go on despite all the efforts that may be made 
to arrest or defeat them. Enough is known of this town to make it 
plain to intelligent husbandmen that it affords opportunities for the 
successful prosecution of their work. Its sky and soil, ordained, as 
it should seem, for producing an apple as closely fibred and as richly 
flavored, as juicy and long-keeping as is raised in any ly^vt of Amer- 
ica; by whose chemistry the grasses of these hills are constrained to 
furnish material for cheese such as, when made by skilful hands, leads 
in all the markets where it has been introduced ; which give to In- 
dian corn a peculiar and unequalled fitness and value for purposes 
of canning and preservation; and to the potato a brittle jacket and 
a liberal harvest-home, are their backers and guarantors ; and better 
ones, more reliable, more certain to respond upon demand and 
notice, will scarcely be found anywhere. 



96 HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE. 



CHAPTER IX. 

CONTRIBUTIONS AND REMINISCENCES. 

]My Alma Mater — Her Students^ Professors, and Patrons, by 
" Uncle John." — The first school-house in the Doctor Bradford 
district Avas built about the beginning of the century. It was an 
old-fashioned square building, with a hipi^ed roof, and was never 
painted ; it stood on the same spot where the present school-house 
stands. The master's desk was on the east side of the room be- 
tween two enormous fire-places, where wood was burned daily by 
the cord. Wood then cost nothing but hauling, and great havoc 
was made in its consumption. The scholars took turns in building 
the fires; there was some emulation as to Avho could keep the best 
fires. It might have been in the summer of 1820 or 1821 that a 
violent tornado took the school-house in its track and blew ofi" a 
part of the roof into the field near by, and levelled all the fences on 
both sides of the road. I remember to have rather enjoyed it, es- 
pecially in going home through the puddles, where a score of 
urchins had great fun, wading to their knees. The old school-house 
finally came to the humiliation of being converted into a wood- 
liouse, and afterwards it was very near being destroyed by fire. 

Jane Monroe was the first school-ma'am, within my remembrance, 
who pointed out to the very smallest scholars the A, B, C, with a 
white-handled penknife. She was not a relative of the two or three 
families of that name living in the district. Her father was a 
Scotchman, who came to this country with Hugh Orr, a man of con- 
siderable prominence in Bridgewater, in the old colony. She kej^t 
the school four summers, to the great satisfaction of the elders and 
benefit of the children. Unfortunately, for the neighborhood, she 
ventured one day to go to Connecticut on a visit, and happily, for 
herself, made the acquaintance of a very estimable gentleman by the 
name of Boyd, to Avhom she was soon married. She never taught 
the A, B, C, with the " white-handled penknife," to any children but 
her own any more. Her regard for the people did not cease with 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 97 

herrcmoAal. She continued to make periodical visits to the old 
school district, and took a deej) interest in her young j;ui)ils, and I 
believe I am safe in saying that they were influenced for good by 
her kind and judicious instruction. She was a jierson of intelligence 
and culture, and of great sweetness of temper and manners, and is 
remembered and spoken of to-day, by the few now living about the 
old school-house, with peculiar interest and afiiection. 

After Miss Monroe came Abigail Talbot, from Turner. She was 
an excellent teacher, and kept two or three summers. She was suc- 
ceeded by Cordelia Allen, of Hartford, a well-educated and accepta- 
ble teacher, who incurred the displeasure of "Uncle" Zach 
Chickering for receiving the addresses of his brother, who he seems 
to have destined to be his companion in bachelorhood. Miss Allen 
married George W. Jones, a respectable man, and moved to Penob- 
scot County. 

Afterwards, Susan Chandler, of Wayne, an excellent instructress, 
and a very pleasant and popular young lady, kept the school. Miss 
Lucy Howe, daughter of Doctor Howe, and sister to Hon. Timothy 
O. Howe, U. S. senator from Wisconsin — who kept the school one or 
two winters, perhaps about the time his sister was keeping in the 
summer — followed Miss Chandler. 

The writer had graduated, with all the schooling it w\as ever his 
good or evil fortune to receive, previous to Tim's experience in the 
district, but he well remembers seeing him during his school-master 
experience, tall and angular in person, with an amiable and benig- 
nant expression, and strongly resembling his father, the doctor, who 
was a popular and genial gentleman. 

I do not remember much of Perkins, the first master in the new 
school-house. Nathaniel Haynes, son of Elder John Haynes, might 
have followed Perkins. He became a lawyer and politician, and set- 
tled in Bangor. 

E. F. Deane came on about this time. Deane was afterwards a 
lawyer, and settled in Gardiner. He kept three or four winters. He 
was a hard disciplinarian, and was charged with inflicting capital 
punishment upon the younger boys as a sort of terror to the big boys 
on the "back seats." He had an enormous ferrule, made of bird's-eye 
maple, and I remember his cruelly ferruling Jacob Childs, a weak 
and inoffensive person, incapable of a misdemeanor, because he did 
not dare to thrash the guilty parties. I never entirely forgave him 
for this cowardly performance, and I think he lost favor with the 



98 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 



ham.lsome girls in the school, who detect a cowardly man with un- 
erring instinct, and no doubt he was punished by an uj^braiding con- 
science for many a long day.* 

Oakes Thompson succeeded Mr. Deane and was an acceptable 
master. He gave a good deal of attention to declamation, and his 
recitation from Pope's Homer, commencing 

" Aurora, now fau- daughter of the dawn," 

was the special admiration of the boys; yet it never received the 
favor that was afterwards accorded to John Monroe's "Hohenlin- 
den," " Again to battle, Achians," and " The Highlander." Among 
the incidents of Mr. Thompson's school I remember the follow- 
ing : A class, consisting of a young man and a small boy, 
was called out for recitation in geography. The answers, as laid 
down in the book, were given, the last of which (referring to the 
position of the Island of St. Helena) having been correctly made by 
the boy, the master inquired of the elder scholar, " What great man 
was imprisoned there?" "I have not got so far as that" was the 
response. Not far from this time the same boy and a girl of about 
his age were reciting a lesson from one of the grammars of the 
period, in which, in opposite columns, names were set down, repre- 
senting the masculine and feminine genders, as 

Man Woraau 

Boy Girl 

Husband Wife 

Uncle Aunt 

the boy giving the first and the girl the second column. The re- 
sponses proceeded till the last, when the boy having said " uncle," 
the girl promptly answered " pismire," bringing a suffusion to the 
master's cheeks and an audible "snicker," such as only the old-time 
country school could give, from the boys and girls. 

Lyman Rawson, afterwards judge of probate for Oxford County, 
Hiram Bradbury, John Monroe, Jr., and Samuel Dinsmore, now or 
formerly an M. D. in Piscataquis County, were among the subsequent 
masters of tliis school during the winters that covered my curricu- 



*Our conti-ibutor is rather severe on Mr. Deane, who was one of the best masters the school 
ever had, and enjoyed the respect and confidence of the parents in an eminent degree. Ho 
was a member of Howdoin CoHege at the time of his scliool-keeping in Livermore. After his 
graduation he studied law, in Gardiner, with Hon. George Evans, and when admitted to the 
bar became a partner of that gentleman. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMOEE, 99 

lum, though I think my attendance during the term of the last- 
named was rather as a resident graduate. 

The winter schools were very full, sometimes numbering eighty 
scholars or more, and among tliem were a good many big fellows 
who occupied the seats of honor, called the "back seats." They 
were not so perfect in their lessons as in feats of wrestling, snow- 
balling, and "washing the faces" of the boys in the snow. I forget 
under what reign five of these big fellows !iad built a desk before 
the fire, and had taken possession one morning before the arrival of 
the master, where they could kick the shins of the small fry as they 
were warming themselves at the fire. They had, however, but a 
single field day, enjoying themselves hugely under the delusion that 
possession was the "nine points" in their case. The high court of 
"committee men" got wind of the proceeding and met in Star- 
chamber conclave in the evening and adopted decided measures for 
the utter discomfiture of the confederates. When the valiant 
builders of desks and benches came to school next mornino- their 
demoralization was complete, finding all their carpenter work, ex- 
cepting what had been used to kindle the morning fire, broken to 
flinders and pitched into the middle of a four-acre lot. The heroes 
took to the back seats with mortification and kept hid behind their 
books. 'Twas a perfect Waterloo. They couhl not endure the 
roguish winks of the boys and girls, and some of them were so dis- 
gusted with the hard road to knowledge that they left the track 
" where fame's proud temple shhies afar," and have never been heard 
of since. 

The spelling schools, speaking schools, and debating clubs were 
sources of a good deal of pleasure and perhaps some profit at the 
time. There was considerable dramatic talent among the scholars, 
and the exhibitions in that line were frequent. John Monroe was 
enthusiastic and indefatigable in preparing for the performances and 
arranging the pro.perties and scenery of the stage. Many of the 
old mothers, whose lives were a constant sacrifice for their children, 
were teased to death for carpets, blankets, curtains, and clothes lines 
to furnish the theatre. John, who was a good reader and prided 
himself on his elocution, and Avas the great representative of trage- 
dy, appeared in more than one of Shakspeare's plays. His greatest 
achievement in this line was in the character of Marc Antony in 
'Julius Caesar." At this time the Scotch Tartan plaids were in 
great vogue. John had a gay cloak (the envy of all the scholars) 



100 HISTOEY OF LIVERMORE. 

with big arm-holes. Tlie great point he made on the stage was in 
exhibiting one of tliose openings in the cloak to the audience, with 
the exclamation, "Look you here, see where ran Cassius' dagger 
through; see what a rent the envious Casca made!" etc. Snelling 
Monroe always "giggled" at this point. 

The reading books of the period — the " Columbinn Orator," 
"American Preceptor," "Scott's Lessons," and "Murray's English 
Reader" — were full of extracts from the old English comedies. 
These sterling old plays were well studied, and the acting of them 
Avould not suffer in comparison with that of the more pretentious 
academy boys of the present day. Sir Charles and Lady Rackett in 
" Three Weeks after Marriage," Lovegold and Lappett in the 
" Miser," Boniface and Aimwell in the "Beaux Stratagem," Lady 
Townly and Lady Grace in the " Provoked Husband," BelCour and 
Stockwel) in the " West Indian," were among the favorite pieces. 
Abijah Monroe, son of Uncle John, was very felicitous in reciting 
"Pity the Sorrows of a Poor Old Man," and always brought down 
the house. 

Oar entertainments were sometimes aided by Mr. Thomas Hanna, 
a native of Lisburn, in the north of Ireland, of good family and ed- 
ucation, who by some curious fortune dropped right down here in 
the wilderness. He was known as " The Colonel," and had some 
talent as a venti-iloquist. He resided in the bailiwick for several 
years. If the colonel had a weakness it was for an occasional glass 
of toddy, and it was a dodge of his to decline his role of " Killing 
the Calf" until the consideration of a glass of old Jamaica was pro- 
duced, which never failed to inspire him to his best efforts in his 
peculiar line. But sometimes he could be persuaded to "Kill the 
Calf" for the delectation of the boys and girls who attended these 
exhibitions, although he knew that on such occasions he could have 
no dram. 

John Humphrey, who was the only son of his mother, and she a 
widow, was among the more promising young men of the district. 
His accidental and early death caused universal sorrow. He Avas a 
nephew of " Aunt Kidder," now living at the advanced age of one 
hundred and two, and was a great reader of books, especially of the 
old English authors, and had devoured every book in the town 
library. He took an active part in all our dramatic entertainments, 
and was an enthusiastic declainier. He drew largely from the Ro- 
man history and orators for his themes. I can see him, as if it were 



HISTORY OF LTVERMORE. 101 

but yesterday, in the speech of Adherbal to tlie Roman senate, im- 
ploring their assistance against Jugurtha. Tlie Revolutionar)'^ ora- 
tors, also, such as Dr. Warren, John Adams, and Patrick Henry, 
held a place of honor in his repertoire. He had a high-toned and 
laudable ambition, and a cliivalrous spirit, with the utmost simplici- 
ty of character, and had he lived could scarcely have failed to 
achieve a useful and honorable career in life. The snows of more 
than forty winters must have lain on his breast, and 'tis a grateful 
pleasure to-day to place this slight offering of remembrance on his 
almost forgotten grave. 

These exhibitions were not postponed on account of the weather; 
blow high, blow low, come rain, or come snow, the attendance was 
jirompt and full. Abijah, John, and Snelling Monroe, and all from 
tlie extreme outlying homes came a mile and a half through the 
drifts, and perhaps after chopping in the woods all day. Nothing 
but a tremendous storm kept the girls at home; the hope of their ap- 
proval and appreciation might have had some influence in bringing 
the young Rosciuses of the period to their very best efforts. 

'Twas no uncommon thing for the boys and girls to assemble at 
the school-house on moonlit nights for a bout at sliding down hill. 
There was no little rivalry about the speed of the sleds, and the ef- 
fort to get a good start was as exciting as we see nowadays at the 
trotting park. The truth of history requires me to say that among 
all the sled-owners Stedman Kendall came out the winner, Sted. 
built the best fires, cut the most wood, could skate the fastest, and 
catch the most pickerel of any boy in the neighborhood. 

The Livermore Social Library was always kept at the doctor's; 
the cupboards in the kitchen and parlor were the alcoves where the 
books were placed. The volumes were not extensive, but were 
select, embracing many of the standard English authors. "The 
Pilgrim's Progress," "Robinson Crusoe," and "The Vicar of Wake- 
field" were read over and over again, and the old ladies in the 
neighborhood never discovered to their dying day that they had 
been reading the best romances that were ever written, though they 
regarded novels as a delusion and a snare. "The Arabian Nights' 
Entertainments" were literally "used np." Sterne's works were 
read by the old folks. The doctor was fond of reading aloud from 
Sterne, and the story of Uncle Toby and Le Fever was a great 
favorite with him, closing with Uncle Toby's oath, " He shall not 
8 



102 



HISTORY OF LIVETIMORE. 



die, by heaven," and the statement that the " accusing spirit, which 
flew up to heaven's chancery with the oath, blushed as he gave it in ; 
and the recording angel, as he wrote it down, dropped a tear upon 
the word and blotted it out forever." The seliolars used to take 
the library books into school to read, winch with the school books 
before sj^oken of gave them a healthy literary tone. 

Capt. Pray kept the dancing school in the winter in the old 
Masonic hall over his sho]). The young gentlemen were provided 
with sheepskin pumps from the midnight bench of John Sanders, 
There was rivalry in the dancing school ns well as in the sliding 
school. It would be invidious to name the most elegant and grace- 
ful on the " light fantastic toe," but I remember very distinctly the 
"swing balance," which was executed with singular grace by one of 
the lads, who to this day prides himself on that special performance 
even more than he does uj)oa his slight-of-foot exhibition at Mem- 
phis, when the rebels were upon his track, for it served him well, it 
is reported, on a recent occasion when, as chief magistrate of a 
western Commonwealth, he opened the ball given in honor of a 
Russian Prince. Columbus Horsley tipped the fiddle for twelve and 
a half cents jt?e?* capita an evening, regular, with an extra charge for 
nights when the school was visited by scholars from the outlying 
districts. A man by the name of Ford sometimes kept a short 
school at Horsley's hall in summer, between the hay and grain har- 
vest. His style of dancing was more modern than Capt. Pray's 
method, and it was admitted that he took the fly off" on "swinging." 

The ball dresses of the period Avere not from the Lyons' looms 
but were woven by the fair hands of the fair wearers themselves, 
and after passing through the mill of Kimball, celebrated as the 
best clothier and dresser in half a dozen counties, came out smooth 
and shining, and were very attractive to look on. Kimball was 
something of a gallant, and was accused of ])artiality to his favoiites 
among the damsels, which he indicated by giving to them a favorite 
tint of coloring, much to the disgust of the homely girls. 

About this time, when Chase and Morrow were in full tide of suc- 
cessful experiment, and furnished all the country with better sleighs 
than the minds of men had ever conceived, Horace Gould kept the 
singing school. He had a magnificent voice and Avas a successful 
teacher. It has always been thought that some fine musical talent 
was lost to future years by his persistence in the opinion that cer- 



HISTORY OF LrV^EUMORE. 



103 



tain youngsters had better " wait till another winter" before taking 
lessons. 

Uncle John Monroe lived quietly under the hill. Uncle Abel 
lived on the top of the hill, but not so quietly. He was of an in- 
quiring mind and slightly aggressive, and delighted in theological 
disputes and was always ready for a controversy. The itinerant 
Universalists were tolerably thick in those days, preaching round in 
the school-houses and barns, and wherever one put up his head 
Uncle Abel was ready to hit him. He afterwards, it is understood, 
became himself a Broad Churchman, trusting in a universal redemp- 
tion. His wife, a lady of culture and refinement, was connected 
with the fimily of the late Col. Israel Thorndike, of Boston. Uncle 
'Bijah kept the wayside inn, one of the old-fashioned, comfortable 
taverns, with a great fireplace for wood, and the cleanest sanded floor 
in the world. It was a treat to sit there in your comfortable kitchen 
chair. The ministers, the young lawyers and doctors who were 
waiting for something to turn up, might be found at Uncle 'Bijah's, 
on the pleasant summer days under the portico, or in the chimney 
corner in the long winter evenings. It was there that the young 
professional aspirants, who, according to Dr. Holland, had spent the 
" principal," lived on the " interest of their money." 

Uncle Philoon was an honest son of Erin, and a useful and con- 
venient man to have about. Nobody was his match with the sickle 
in the autumn, and in the short Avinter days you could hear his flail 
in all the neighboring barns. He was always in good spirits. This 
was a common refrain to his sounding flail : 

" King Geoi-ge on the throne 
Is a good king I own, 
But the memory of King William forever." 

When Henry Aldrich and Seth Ballon were setting the world 
around Brettun's Mills crazy with the new patent threshing ma- 
chine which they had introduced, Philoon visited the Mills, and 
on his return, in reply to my father's question " What is the news," 
replied, 

" There's nothing new 
But Aldrich and Ballou." 

He preferred Capt. Samuel Morison for representative in the legisla- 
ture to Dr. Bradford, because he said he " would credit his keeping." 
There was an unusually good race of men in the circle known to 



104 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 



ray boyhood. Dr. Bradforc], Capt. Waters, Capt. Pray, Capt. Kendall^ 
Capt. Leavitt, George Chandler, Jesse Kidder, Uncles John, Ahijali, 
and Abel Monroe,* Uncle Bartlett, the Coolidges, the Stricklands' 
and the Chases were good, solid, honest, faithful, and stanch men ; 
men of convictions and principles, with an honest purpose for every 
duty, and Avho made all reasonable sacrifices to educate their chil- 
dren, that their lot in life might be better than their own. They 
settled a new country, underwent the ])rivations attending early set- 
tlers, worked hard, fared hard, but with industry and good manage- 
ment lived comfortably. It was a neighborliood of great social 
harmony. I don't remember a neighborhood quarrel. They were 
all politicians, to a greater or less extent, and not witliout ambition ; 
they read the newspapers with interest; they discussed and criticised 
all questions of neighborhood. State, and country; were a trifle more 
conservative than their descendants, perhaps, but were intolerant of 
injustice, oppression, meanness, and lying. Most of them lived to 
old age, and died and were buried where their lives had been 
passed. Capt. Kendall, a man of great spirit and keen sense of 
honor, followed his children to a newer but not a happier country. 
An early sorrow had settled a dark veil upon his fice which was 
never lifted again. I look back with a sort of mournful pleasure, 
not unmixed with pride, upon their useful and honest lives, and feel 
thankful for the lessons they imparted. May they rest in peace ! 

And from the primitive old brown, and later old white, school- 
house, without a letter of Latin or Greek, with the simple instruc- 
tion in reading, writing, and arithmotic, I slid quietly and unnoticed 
away from the good old neighborhood, while a great many other 
boys, more flivored, went to the high schools, academies, and col- 
leges. No wonder that when, at a long subsequent period, a bright 
and ingenuous youth was hearing others discuss their graduations 
and their degrees, their class days and commencements, and was told 
that the writer's alma mater was represented by the old faded 
school-house, he should have been struck with amazement that one 
with such scant opportunity " should be so wise." 



Extracts from Notks made, in the journal of 3I(ij. Thomas 
Fish^ Jan. 10, 1852, by Thomas Chase, Esq., of Washington, D. C 

From a careful examination of these ancient entries (they were 
made by Thomas Fish, of Oxford, in the county of Worcester and 

*Almo3t every farmer In town over fifty years old was called " Uncle." 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 105 

State of Massachusetts), I find tliat lie was a surveyor, and for 
that reason was employed by Dea. Liverniore, and finally de- 
cided to settle in Livermore, Dea. Livermore purijosed to remove 
to Livermore about a. d. 1775, but the "times that tried men's 
souls" coming on, that great project was abandoned for the time be- 
ing, and he did not leave Waltham until April, 1779, and — tarrying 
at Winthrop some four or five months, while he raised a crop in 
" Liverton " and built a frame house — removed to his new farm on 
the west bank of the Androscoggin River, and near the centre of 
the town, in the fall of 1779; of course the winter of 1779-80 was 
the first he passed at Livermore. 

Remarks. — The towns of Winthrop and Readfield were first 
called " Pond Town," and it seems Winthrop was first so called in 
1773, as by foregoing * The town of Turner Maj. Fish here seems 
to call Sylvester. "Phipps' Canada" in the foregoing is now Jay and 
Canton. About this time, or soon after, Bethel and Rumford were 
called " Sudbury-Canada." Fryeburg and vicinity were the ancient 
"Pigwacket," and (1773) still retained that name. (I had forgotten 
to say that "Canton Point" is the ancient "Roccomeco" of the In- 
dians.) Hallowell was at this time (1773) and long afterward 
called " The Hook." Augusta was " The Fort," for the reason that 
a fort was there built to protect the first settlers against the Rocco- 
meco and Norridgewock Indians. 

I now propose to give a short narrative of Thomas Fish, derived 
principally from the late Samuel Livermore, Esq., the youngest son 
of Dea. Elijah Livermore (who married my aunt, Lura Chase, born 
at Martha's Vineyard), Widow Anna Hamlin, a daughter of the 
deacon, residing at Paris Hill, the late Josiah Wyer, of Livermore, 
and Jabez Delano, also of Livermore. The widow Hamlin is the 
only one of these persons now living (a. d. 1852, Jan. 16th). Fish 
was a widower. The writer does not know the date when Thomas 
Fish was born, but supposes it was about the year 1750, perhaps 
eai'lier. After surveying and lotting out the township of Livermore, 
or a considerable portion of it, and abandoning for the then present 
time the settlement of it, in consequence of the breaking out of the 
Revolutionary war, Thomas Fish went into the patriot army as an 
officer. Whether he ever held more than one commission the writer 
knows not, but during the latter part of his military career he was 

*That i3, by statement in Maj. Fish's journal. 



106 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



a major in the Continental array and an active and efficient officer. 
He resigned and left the army about the time of the actual close of 
the war, some two years before the treaty of 1783. Deacon Liver- 
more had removed to his new home, and Maj. Fish took up his 
abode with him ; he was an umnurried man, a widower with two or 
three children, a competent surveyor and an active business man for 
those times; he either was a shoemaker by trade or had taken up 
that business in order to imj^rove what would otherwise have been 
waste time. 

It will be seen by the preceding sketches,* in the handwriting of 
MaJ. Fish, that the first route from Boston to Livermore was by 
water to Falmouth, now Portland, thence by land through the sev- 
eral towns and townships, the last of which is now Minot, the east- 
erly part of which is now Auburn, and Turner, to Livermore.t It 
was soon ascertained to be an easier route to go up the Kennebec 
River to Hallowell, tlience by land through what is now VVinthrop, 
Wayne, and East Livermore, to Livermore, crossing the Androscog- 
gin below "the rips," a mile below what has since been Benjamin's 
Ferry. This ferry below the rips was kept by old Reuben Wing, 
the husband of "Aunt Priss Wing," a somewhat famous personage 
in the early history of Livermore ; and the writer has it by tradition 
that Dea. Livermore gave Wing a lot of land on the east side of the 
river to keep the ferry for the accommodation of those wishing to 
pass, who also paid their ferriage. On this route Maj. Fish be- 
came acquainted in the family of old Mr. Marrow, with one of 
whose daughters he became a fovorite It was the first or sec- 
ond winter (probably the second, for Maj. Fish "had made his 
pitch" and built him a "log cabin " near the upper end of "the great 
meadow," and Avhere soon alter was built the first school-house in 
town, in which the writer "took his degree," which meadow still 
retains the name, " Fish Meadow,") that Maj. Fish took his shoe- 
maker's tools and went to Winthrop to woi'k a few weeks at shoe- 
making, bvit more particularly to do up a small job of courting the 
Marrow girl, preparatory to their marriage, which was to take place 
on his next visit. After tarrying at Mr. Marrow's a few weeks he 
left for Livermore. Unfortunately, a cold north-east snow storm 
commenced that same day, making it a hard day's work to travel on 

♦These sketches will he found in the appendix. 

tThe journal of the trip in 1772 (to be found in the appendix) waa kept in anotlier book. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



10*7 



foot to Dea. Livennore's in one day, and he did not get across the 
river till after dark. When about half a mile short of the deacon's, 
on the south part of that farm, by mistake he turned out of the 
road to the west side something like a rod, and finding his mistake 
turned, to the east, and crossing the road and traveling by a cir- 
cuitous route along tlie south and east of the hill through the deep 
snow, apparently became exhausted. He hung up his pack on the 
dead limb or knot of a spruce tree; there was a burnt stub near 
by on which he made many marks and scratches, as was supposed 
to give some account of his last cruise, and also to give some 
directions as to his little property, but nothing intelligible could 
ever be made of the writing or scratching on the stub. He laid 
himself down beside a pine tree, turned up by the roots, and 
died. He was found about three days afterwards. Uncle Jabez 
Delano being the first who found him. Thus died Maj. Thomas 
Fish, After enduring the hardships of a surveyor, even moi-e, the 
hardships of a soldier in the Revolutionary war, he died alone in a 
swamp, with not a friend to close his eyes. 

From my Uncle, Samuel Livermore, I first heard the facts concern- 
ing Maj, Fish. He pointed out to me the place (a. d. 1817) where 
Fish died. The pine root and about ten feet of the trunk stttl re- 
mained, as when Fish died. In 1850, I was there and it was 
removed ; it was on the plain nearly east from Dea. Livermore's 
house, about six rods from the bottom of the hill, and about twenty 
rods south of the road leading from (now) Hillman's Ferry, up by 
the old Dea. Livermore house, to the Methodist meeting-house. 
Uncle Jabez Delano told me the same in substance as my Uncle 
Samuel Livermore, and further that it was not known by Dea. Liv- 
ermore's folks that Maj. Fish had left Winthrop for a day or two. 
As soon as it was known search was made (I think Delano then 
lived at Winthrop), and his track could be and was followed, by 
which means he was readily found ; also his deviation from the road 
at first was made known by his track. On the night Maj. Fish died, 
and about midnight, Dea. Livermore's folks heard a noise as of one 
in distress, and some of them got up — the deacon himself, my father 
says ; the noise ceasing, they thought it must be some wild beast, 
and did not answer nor fire guns. 

Widow Anna Hamlin, by whose kindness I am favored with this 
antiquity, told me last Tuesday — Jan. 27, 1852 — "I was a very little 
girl when Maj, Fish froze to death, and slept in the trundle bed. It 



108 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

was in the evening when they got Maj. Fish to our house; he was 
crooked, as he died, and they laid him upon the hearth before the 
fire to tliaw him. Several times I looked out over the headboard of 
my trundle bed and saw them thawing Maj. Fish so that they could 
lay him out. He was buried at Winthrop, and not a stone tells 
where he lies. Two years since a daughter of his Avas still living in 
Massachusetts, and one of the Livermore connections saw her; she 
wished to have her father's ashes removed to Massachusetts, but his 
place of rest could not be pointed out." 

The sword that Maj. Fish had in the Continental army was used 
by Maj. William Livermore, the deacon's oldest son. He let my 
father have it, and he used it until he was made colonel, when he 
bought another. My father let my Uncle Gilbert Hathaway have 
the "Maj. Fish sword." It was a short but heavy sword, probably 
a genuine "broad sword;" it had been ground sharp, and was a 
very formidable weapon in the hand of a skilful swordsman. I re- 
member that sword very distinctly. I also distinctly remember 
Maj. Fish's cellar, near where the "Fish Meadow school-house" used 
to be, and assisted ray schoolmates to bury two hedge hogs in it 
that Uncle Jabe Delano had killed in his coin field with a pitch- 
fork in 1808 or 1809. 

Wild Beasts. — Wild beasts were plenty in Livermore in those 
early days. I give a few fxcts. Uncle Jabe Delano and two others, 
each having an axe, had crossed the river below the rips, at the old 
Wing Ferry, some distance below Benjamin's Ferry and the Jona- 
than Merrill farm, having been at work for old Mr. Norcross — who 
died soon after and was buried in a severe north-east snow storm (as 
per Uncle Nat Dailey) — and soon after taking their course up I'iver 
toward Dea. Livermore's, "treed" a smallish bear; they had no gun 
with them, but they must have the bear; so two of them cut the tree 
down ; Uncle Jabe placed himself favorably, and when the tree fell 
he "seized the bear by the heels and swung him over his head till 
he got to a tree and knocked his brains out." Uncle Jabe met a 
large bull moose on the east side of the Fish Meadow, about twenty 
rods east of the road across the Meadow, when looking for part- 
ridges. Luckily, he had a ball in his pocket, and rolling it into his 
gun shot the moose dead on the spot, at the moment the moose was 
going to attack him. "Moose Hill" in the north-east corner of the 
town was so named from the circumstance that Dea. Livermore shot 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 



109 



a moose there with his own hand. Tlie carcass of that moose was 
secured for a time in a hole on the deacon's intervale, not far from a 
lone pine tree that has been there ever since I can remember. 



Segregations from Entries referring to Zivermore, made in 
1873, by Thomas Chase, Esq. 

Casualties.— Among tlie early settlers in the south part of the 
town was Jonathan Morse, afterwards captain of the "South Compa- 
ny." JMorse was a blacksmith, but was also making for himself and 
family a farm. He had got a barn frame raised when a neighbor- 
woman, a xMrs. Keith, wife of Eben Keith, called to see Mrs. 
Morse one afternoon; both these women had nursing children. 
After chatting awhile in the house they went out to see the new 
barn frame, taking their infonts with them. They sat down upon 
the sill of the barn when, without anytliing to attract their atten- 
tion, alarm them, or arouse their fears, the broken fragments of the 
frame were upon them; it was a total wreck. Mrs. Morse was 
killed where she sat, but her infant in her arms was not seriously 
injured. Mrs. Keith and inflxnt Avere not badly hurt ; all this was 
done by a whirlwind. 

An early settler in town was Stephen Fisher. He lived on the 
south road, not far from Dea. Fisher's. I know not how numerous 
his family was in 1794 or thereabouts, but he had one little girl* 
four or five years old. One day in mild weather she was missing 
from the house. Search was made about the house, then about all 
the buildings, all the fences, all the neighborhood, and finally the 
whole town and part of Turner were in the search, which continued 
for seven days, when a little apron was found about a mile from her 
home that she had on when last seen, and under such circumstances 
as to make it probable that she had been devoured by some evil 
beast; but some people always doubted it and thought her drowned 
or strangled in the Bog Brook. Three generations are nearly past, 
and the little Fisher girl has never been seen or heard of. 

There was a pond which I knew as Bartlett's Pond while I so- 
journed in the town of my nativity, at the outlet of which Capt. 
Kendall used to have a tan-yard. This is a small, black, deep pond, 
three-quarters of a mile long by less then half a mile wide. The 

*There is some doubt whether this child was a girl or boy. 



no 



HISTORY OP LIVERMORE. 



first jjerson drowned there, to my knowledge, was the daughter of 
Luther Lovewell, and niece of Isaac Lovewell, a girl some ten or 
twelve years old. It was early in this century. She was crossing 
the pond on tlie ice in the spring and broke in. The next were 
three boys near my age, perhaps about the year 1817. It was Sun- 
day morning, and they were bathing Avith their clothes off; they got 
on a raft of loose bits of boards, were frightened, and drowned each 
other, there being i;o one present able to rescue them. One of these 
boys was Nathan .Monroe, second son of "Uncle" Abel; another 
Avas named Folsoni; tlie name of the other I have forgotten. The 
fifth person I remember as being drowned in Bartlett's Pond was a 
young Bicknell, from Hartford; he Avas an aj^prentice to my relative 
Sarson Chase. Young Bicknell Avas drowned about 1825. 

Another startling fact I Avill name: Stacey Knox bought the 
William Chamberlain firm (I should think) prior to 1800; he got 
Avell off as a farmer, but Avent into the lumbering business and lost 
all, and Avas drowned at Livermore Falls, 1820, 1825, or later. 
But the main fict I am after is this : Mr. Knox had a son, Daniel, 
okl enough for military service in 1812, a tall, slim man; could 
outwalk the Avandering Jew, or almost anybody ever heard of, and 
Avas braA'e to a fault. He enlisted in the Avar of 1812; Avas on the 
Canada frontier; and Avhenever volunteers Avere called for a dan- 
gerous exi>edition, Daniel Knox Avas one. When Commodore O. H. 
Perry Avanted more men for his terrible fight on Lake Eiie, and Avas 
permitted to call for volunteers from the land force, Daniel Knox 
Avas among the first; was on the commodore's "flagship;" when 
that became disabled and Perry Avished to charge, and called for 
twelve men to roAV him in an open boat, Daniel Knox was one of 
"that tAvelve;" Avhen Perry stopped the first shot hole in their boat 
Avitli his oimi coat., Daniel Knox stopped the second Avith his own 
jacket. Daniel Avas in for the Avar, nor did his friends and family at 
Livermore see him as soon as some other soldiers got home, and 
there was a report for a week or tAvo that he Avas killed for his 
money; but Daniel came safe and sound at last. Daniel Avas in- 
dustrious always, and Avhen his father Avent into the lumber busi- 
ness used to Avork for him. About 1820 or later I think, in the 
spring of the year, they were breaking in a brow of logs on Mus- 
quito Brook, in the toAvn of Jay ; the brow gave way Avhile Daniel 
Avas on it, or before it, and broke him all to pieces. 

Two of my grandfather's brothers came to Livermore soon afler 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 



Ill 



he came, and settled on a lot of land adjoining and northerly of 
Isaac Lovevvell's; their names Avere Tristram and Sarson. Uncle 
Sarson took the west half of tlie lot, and Tristram the east, on 
the west side of the pond at the south end. Sarson was a shoe- 
maker. Uncle Tristram had been a sea captain, nor did he entirely 
abandon that business on settling at Livermore. I think it was in 
1801, he made a voyage to the V/est Indies, for some merchant or 
sliip owner at Portland. His voyage out was safe and prosper- 
ous. On his return he was lost overboard in a gale and could 
not be recovered. He left a wife and three children at his com- 
fortable and pleasant home in Livermore. About this time Col. 
Jesse Stone lost his first wife and soon after married Capt. Chase's 
widow for his second wife. Col. Stone had three children of his 
first wife: Polly, who married Ephraim Pray, and lived at the 
Falls ; Dwight, who went to Massachusetts, and Capt. John Stone, 
who mari'ied Ann Orill Coolidge. John died young, and his widow 
married Sewall Cram, Esq., of Wilton, a particular friend and asso- 
ciate of mine. Aunt Chase had three children when she married 
Col. Stone : Elizabeth, who married Nathaniel Benjamin, and lived 
and died on the Intervale ; Abigail, who married Charles Barrell, 
afterwards a deacon, and a very worthy, good man ; they had a large 
family; I have not learned of her death; Charles T. Chase, of Dix- 
field, a prominent business man, was Uncle Tristram's youngest 
child, and was an infant when his fother was lost. Col. Stone and 
Aunt Stone had two children, both sons ; William A. went south, 
and the second, Mathew Merry Stone, lived at the Falls the last I 
knew. Col. Stone lived to be a very old man. 

The other painful circumstance I will ngw relate is this: Nap- 
thali Coffin and wife were among the early settlers in Livermore. 
They were from Wiscasset, and had a large family, most or all of 
whom were born at Livermore. The first two children were Wil- 
liam, and Nancy (who was Mrs. Atwood) ; the third was Stephen, 
who was very near my age. These children, with several others, 
were gathered at John Gibbs' with his children ; I was among them. 
Our ages varied from three to seven years ; Stephen Coffin was four 
years old, the same age that I was. In our sport and play we got 
to climbing upon an old-fashioned hay-cart body that leaned against 
a fence, up edgewise. Unluckily, we got too many on for the lean 
of the body to overbalance us, and it fell over from the fence upon 
some ten or twelve of us ; most of us were hurt more or less, and 



112 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 



poor Steplien Coffin so badly that he died in a short time ; most of 
the others are gone long since. 

But one of the most afflicting and painful accidents or casualties 
that has ever happened in my native town was as follows: Among 
the early settlers of Liverraore were a Mr. Weston and a Mr. Rowell. 
Weston was on a river farm east side, and Rowell on a river farm 
west side, and nearly opposite each other, something like a mile be- 
low the Falls. Some one near the Falls made "a falling bee," and 
all hands turned out to fell trees, Weston and Rowell among them. 
By a tree or "drove" going the wrong way both Weston and Row- 
ell were killed on the spot! My fathei-, then a minor, hel}ied my 
grandfather, whose name I bear, to make their coffins and put them 
in them. I remember six (probably all) of Weston's children, three 
sons and three daughters. Two of the daughters married Asa Lane 
and Eben Whittemore, and lived near the Falls on the east side ; 
the other daughter married a Stront, of Poland or thereabouts. 
The two elder sons left Livermore not many years after the painful 
death of their father, and their whereabouts has ever since been un- 
known ; the youngest son, Jonas Weston, Esq., or Rev. Jonas Wes- 
ton, Avas for many years a prominent citizen of Livermore, also a 
prominent Methodist preacher. Past middle age he went to Penob- 
scot County, from which section he was a member of the senate of 
Maine, His wife was Catherine Barton, eldest sister of my first 
wife. 

Facetiae. — There w^as a cavalry company in Livermore, and one 
of its members for some years was a man by the name of Gideon 
Southard, an eccentric, queer genius. Southard was at a training 
of the company at the Washburn place, with several of his neigh- 
bors, also troopers, and the moment they were dismissed Southard 
called loudly to those going with him to hurry, for he had promised 
his wife to come home that night sober, and if he was not at home 
about that time his wife would be so mad he could not live with 
her. Having a little business to do, they urged him to tarry a 
while. Soon as possible they were ready, and called Southard, who 
very deliberately said : " My wife has got as mad as she can get by 
this time, and it's no use to hui-ry." 

Isaac Lovewell was called rather a hard-faced man in his deal- 
ings and money matters. One day at town-meeting some little 
trouble came up between him and another, and the other accused 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 116 

Lovcwcll of Imving no conscience. Many were present ami took 
part in tlie chat. Lovewell insisted that he liad as niucli conscience 
ns any of them. Abel Monroe intimated that he might have, bnt 
that it mnst be a very convenient one, and would stretch and con- 
tract to favor Ids interest. Many others gave laughable opinions. 
P^inally, John Howard, a younger brother to " Uncle Sim," decided 
that Lovewell had the best conscience of any man in town ; " though 
it was somewhat old, it was just as good as new, never having been 
used." 

Dea. Livermore usually built a saw-mill and grist-mill at or 
near the same place, and for several years lie owned three or four 
sets of these mills at one and the same time. Of course he was in 
need of millers. There was a man in that region, I think in P'ay- 
ette, named Walton, of whose integrity and uprightness some had 
doubts. This man had just l)een made a deacon, of which fact Dea. 
Livermore was not aware. He applied to Dea. Livermore "to tend 
his grist-mill" at the Falls. Livermore was cold and repulsive on 
the occasion, and Walton urgent in proportion; finally, Walton 
told the deacon of his advancement to a deacon&liip. "Well, well," 
said Livermore, "then you are Deacon Walton." "Yes," said Wal- 
ton, now confident of success, " I am Deacon Walton." Livermore, 
with one of his biggest puffs, so peculiar to himself, said, "Well, 
Dea. Walton, anything Avill do for a deacon, but it requires an hon- 
est man for a miller.'''' Dea. Walton was not successful. 

ToLLAWALLA. — Every neighborhood of Livermore was always re- 
spectable except i^erhaps one, and that exception lasted only for a 
few years. I have already called its name, "Tollawalla." Perhaps 
there may still be some stigma upon or attached to that name, so I 
will do that away. This is the neighborhood lying from Col. Lewis 
Hunton's to Strickland's Feriy, on both sides the river. Old jMr. 
Wing, who kept the first ferry, with his wife, "Aunt Pri^s," old Mr. 
Norcross, and Haines Learned were the first settlers here. Noi- 
cross died, sometime prior to 18U0, and was buried in the midst 
of a cold north-east snow storm. Learned failed in business, and 
went South, where he afterwards died ; three of his daughters 
married Morisons, very worthy women. So all the old, first settlers 
had left Tollawalla except the Wing family. A family or race of 
Lovejoys came in there. 1 knew five of the men and one or two of 
the women. Things w^ere missing by the peoi)le, and finally horses, 



114 



HISTOIIY OF LTVERMORE. 



etc., etc., and there were strangers, suspicious strangers, hanging 
about ToUnwalla; but these depredations, perhaps most of them 
fancied, were increasing, and Bishop Soule, then Elder, his brother 
Nathan, my fatlier, and many others made up their minds to bring 
the Tolhiwallians to justice, and rid the town of the eviL I can 
now look back fifty or sixty years, I trust with candor, and ever 
seem to see that this great zeal for honesty and i-iglit Avas carried so 
far as to be a persecution against the inluibitants of that neighbor- 
hoo<l. It was about a State's prison crime for a stranger to be found 
there; several were sent to the State's Prison of Massachusetts for a 
term. Tiie Tolhiwallians had to leave ; some went to one place, 
some to another. But all this does not explain the etymology of 
the name " Tollawalla." This Avas the Indian name of the rips just 
below Col. Huntou's, and meant the little falls, rips, or rapids, and 
really in itself means nothing worse or more disre])utab]e than the 
honorable name, Liverrnore. The rips were so called by the Rocco- 
meco Indians. JMy reader will readily see a similarity between tliis 
name and the name of that tribe itself, Boccomeco; also from the 
same tiibe and language came the name of Kumford Falls, Penni- 
cook, or Great Falls. 

I learned to count as the Roccomeco Indians used to, iu my 
younger days, and to amuse the reader I will give their numerals, 
aiming to give their precise pronunciation in our letters, using no 
silent ones. 

English Indian 

One Pussuck (accent as marked) 

Two Nees 

Thi-ee Wass 

Four Yorr 

Five Palamus (a as in father) 

Six Umkittish 

Seven Tebamus (a as in father) 

Eight Sasack 

Nine Noliwee 

Ten JMetala (a as in father) 

I think I have already said that the Indian name of the river was 
Ain-er-es-cog-gin. These Indians used but ten numerals, but could 
repeat thetn at pleasure, as we do ours. This Indian method of 
counting, as well as many otiier facts before stated, I learned from 
my Uncle Samuel Liverrnore. So fur Mr. Chase. 



HISTORY OF Ln^RMORE. 115 

Of Certain Tramps and Oddities. — Tlic tOAvn used to be vis- 
ited frequently — more perliaps during the last decade of the half 
century succeeding its settlement than at any other period — by 
pedlars, beggars, charlatans, tramps, and odd characters generally, 
some of whom made it at times their head-quarters. 

Prominent among the pedlars was Joshua Brown, a native of 
some town on the lower Kennebec, who is said to have been crazed 
in early manhood by unrequited love. In the better days of his 
itineracy he carried his wares, consisting chietly of needles, pins, 
thimbles, cotton and linen thread, sewing silk, and tapes, on horse- 
back. His traveling expenses — moderate as they were, for his pecul- 
iarities and strange simplicity made him a not unwelcome guest at 
the wayside homes where he was wont to call, and at which the 
charge for sup])er, lodging, breakfast, and horse-kee{)ing could often 
be cancelled by a darning needle — gradually exhausted his cajiital, 
and he was compelled at last to trudge on foot, with his diminished 
stores. A fond, garrulous old man, whom the children were always 
glad to see and hear, his visits were not so much enjoyed by the 
elder sisters and maiden ladies of the household, to whom, to the 
great amusement of the mirth-loving younkers, he never failed, with 
absolute impartiality, to offer himself as a candidate for matrimojiy. 
When a matter-of-fact maiden lady, to Avhom he proposed marriage, 
answered with a prompt and curt negative, like the Laird of Cock- 
pen, upon a similar occasion, "•he gave no sigh," but "mounted his 
mare," and only said as he rode away, "I think you must be a Fos- 
terite, my pretty dear," leaving her to wonder what that might 
mean. 

There was a class of stragglers who frequented the town for 
many years, called " cider pots," who went from house to house beg- 
ging for cider. They were commonly hard cases, seedy and sodden, 
but inotfensive. One of a better type than the general is remem- 
bered. He was a man of education and had evidently seen ha]»pier 
days. He had the carriage and tone of a gentleman. Calling in 
the afternoon of a delicious summer day at one of the hospitable 
orchard-flanked mansions in the town, he inquired if he could be 
favored with a mug of cider. Receiving an attirmative answer, he 
seated himself in the doorway and patiently awaited the return of 
the large-hearted matron, to whom he had addressed his petition. 
When she had given him the cider he sat it upon the floor, and re- 
peated from beginning to end, in a voice of singular sweetness and 



116 



HISTOKY OF LIVEIIMORE. 



pathos, Wonlsworth's " We are Seven." He then drank off his 
cider and bade tlie hidy good-bye. She liad never seen or heard 
the poem befure, but tlie stanza, 

" And often at the sunset, sir, 
When it is bri<ifht and fair, 
I take my little pon-inger, 
And eat my supper there," 

never ceased to liauiit her memory until she was herself 

" In the churchyard laid." 

A peripatetic Irish tailor, by the name of Brennan, who made and 
mended clothes for the more substantial families, enlivened many a 
household by his tales of the "old country," and by good-natured 
threats of vengeance, with his goose, upon all enemies of good little 
boys and girls. 

A well-remembered denizen for a year or two, between forty and 
fifty years ago, was Jeremiah Gil man, from Vermont, a sort of char- 
tered rascal, and the cliampion liar of the town. His fables were so 
impudently and outrageously improbable, so various and audacious, 
that Zachariah Chickering declared he received assistance from the 
father of lies himself. His name — and inore's the pity — will doubt- 
less outlive that of the good deacon whom he had, as he boasted, 
"tackled" on a question of religion, and worsted "on the pinnacle 
of the Scripture." 

A psettdo doctor, pretentious and imposing, haunted the town for 
a season about this time. He related with circumstantial detail and 
curious plausibility many wonderful cures of the sick and remarka- 
ble transformations of the healthy, which had been accomplished by 
his treatment. He found some dupes, but unfortunately they were 
not of "the slaves who ])ay." There was living in town a respecta- 
ble old gentleman, protuberant and unwieldy, whose wife was as 
singularly and inconveniently lean and thin as he was gross and 
stout. The doctor proposed, for a moderate consideration, to trans- 
fer, without pain or danger to either, the surplus rotundity of the 
liusband to the wife. But reasonable as his terms were, he was not 
encouraged to make an experiment which promised results so happy 
and so greatly desiderated! He left town not long afterwards, dis- 
appointed, saddened, not to say affronted, by the want of faith of 
these excellent people in Ids power to do tliem good. But if they 
wanted faith, the gossips of the town, whose wonder and theme he 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 117 

had been, did not ; nor did they cease for many years to lament the 
incredulity which deprived their neighbors of the benefit which 
they might have so surely derived fi'om the magical power of the 
great doctor. 

More substantial is the history and better verified are the works 
of William Godfrey Martin, who was a Hessian soldier, in the Brit- 
ish army, and served in America in the Revolutionary war. After 
its close he came to Maine, and for a good many years was in and 
about Livermore. He professed to have been an educated physician, 
and boasted of having effected some remarkable cures. He told a pa- 
tient that he Avas educated at the Royal College in Leyden, and had 
read " Booerhave in Latin, a book as big as that bed," pointing to 
an old-fashioned large-sized bed upon which the patient was reclin- 
ing ; and that he bought his medicines by wholesale in Portland of 
the " Sharleyarvin," meaning the eminent apothecary and physi- 
cian, Dr. Shirley Ervin. "Having been born under Jupiter," he 
said, "I can generally tell what ails folks." He claimed to have 
been a Mason in the "ninth arch" before he left Germany. 
9 



118 HISTOKY OF LIVEEMORE. 



CHAPTER X. 

THE STORY OF THOMAS FISH. 

1782. 

BY ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN. 

Almost a hundred years ago, 

While Maine's sparse hamlets were scattered wide, 
And threatened still by the savage foe — 

Where the turbulent Androscoggin's tide 
In fetterless freedom flowed at will, 
Unspanned by bridge and untasked by mill — 

Unvexed, as it threaded the forest gloom, 

By floating lumber or hindering boom — 
Across the ice on a winter day. 

As thickly the dizzy snow came down, 
A traveler toiled, on his tiresome way 

To New Port Royal from Winthrop town. 

All day long it had snowed and snowed^ 

And now the drifts were heavy and deep ; 
For a score of miles he had kept the road 

Buried and blocked by the tempest's sweep — 
But beating his hands to keep them warm, 
He faced, undaunted, the blustering storm — 

For only a little space away 

The end of his weary journey lay. 
But all too soon did the shadows fall, 

And the chill gray twilight leave the skies, 
And night let down, like a solid wall, 

Its thick black curtain before his eyes. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORE. 119 

With weary muscles and straining sight, 

He bent his head to the furious blast, 
And toiled and struggled with sturdy might, 

And pictured the rest he should find at last — 
Blessing the way-marks which let him know 
The hidden pathway beneath the snow. 

Had he not Avalked it, in dark and light, 

Often and often, before to-night ? 
But the mighty wind, from the bleak northeast. 

Seized him and smote him and made him reel, 
His feet grew numb, and their aching ceased — 

But the sharp snow stung him like points of steel. 

It beat like sand in his blinded eyes. 

And filled his nostrils, and choked his breath — 
And the cold seemed slowly to paralyze 

His brain to a drowsy dream of death. 
Stumbling, wading — he rose once more 
Deafened and dazed by the tempest's roar, 

And yet again through the drifts he pressed. 

With cold hands beating his aching breast, 
And pulses faltering — while so near, 

Only a short half mile before. 
Were warmth and safety and friendly cheer 

In the dwelling of Farmer Livermore. 

The farmer's kitchen was broad and bright, 

And cheerily out on the driving storm 
Streamed from its windows the ruddy light 

Of the social hearth-fire wide and warm ; 
But the inmates shuddered beside the fire. 
As the raging tempest shrieked in ire. 

And the striving gusts in the chimney cried. 

While higher the snow-banks piled outside. 
But nine had struck from the tall old clock ; 

The ashes over the coals were pressed ; 
The door was fastened with bolt and lock. 

And the farmer's household souojht their rest. 



120 HISTORY OF LIVEEMORE. 

Long after fire and lights were out, 
And half asleep as the farmer lay, 

He dreamed, or fancied, he heard a shout 
In the stormy tumult, far away. 

Alert he listened — and caught once more 

The voice half lost in the wind's wild roar — 
Muffled, faint, on the snow-thick air, 
It came like the cry of a great despair — 

And the farmer, leaving his pillow warm. 

Went out in the darkness and strove to hear, 

In the fitful pauses of blast and storm, 
Again the voice that had reached his ear. 

Long he listened, but all in vain — 

Never again came the pleading cry ; 
Over the clearing, and Avide pine plain, 

The wrathful tempest swept heedless by ; 
And he turned again to the sheltering door, 
Doubting and querying more and more. 
" The night is terrible — who would be 
Out at a time like this," said he, 
"To face this bitter and bleak northeast?" 
And he crept again to his pillow warm ; 
" It was but the cry of a scared wild beast 

Roused from its lair by the howling storm." 

The wanderer's heart grew sick with fear ; 

He had lost the road — and he struggled back 
Manfully, stoutly — for life was dear — 

Eager to reach the baffling track ; 
But, sore bewildered and chilled and blind, 
Crossed it, leaving it far behind. 

Floundering, plunging, with slow advance. 

Away from his life's last feeble chance. 
What wonder, when from his heart was riven 

The precious hope he had tri«d to nurse, 
If he lost all faith in earth and heaven, 

And blamed his fate with a bitter curse ? 



HISTORY OF LIVEEMOEE. 

Could he be lost ? He had passed this way 

On many a wide exploring tramp ; 
Had planned with careful and close survey 

The road to the earliest settler's camp ; 
And long ere the first log house was made 
Had slept in the forest, unafraid, 

With curtain of leaves and pillow of moss; 

Had roamed the ridges and swamps across, 
With compass and quadrant, stake and chain, 

And ti'aced, and measured, and noted down, 
And conned, and studied, again and again. 

The boundary lines of the purposed town. 

Was this the end? Should he never see 
The growth and glory, by land and wave. 

Of the infant nation he helped to free, 
The young republic he fought to save ? 

Never again would his vigorous hand 

Clear the trees from the virgin land, 
Never with cordial warmth again 
Answer the grasp of his fellow-men ? 

Never more should he ford the streams 
Or rove the woods of the future town ? 

And was this the end of his happy dreams ? 
And thus must his brave, strong life go down ? 

He thought of the home he had toiled to frame. 
The new-built house in the meadow set — 

(The faithful meadow still bears his name, 
And the half-filled cellar is seen there yet.) 

The home that waited its coming crown — 

The promised sweetheart in Winthrop town; 
And did she slumber with peaceful breath 
While he was battling alone with death? 

Or did she wake from her happy sleep. 

And peering out through the midnight dim. 

Noting the snow-fall dense and deep, 
Think of his journey and pray for him? 



121 



122 



HISTORY OF LWERMORE. 

Was this the end of his fond desire ? 

Was it for this inglorious close 
His life passed scathless amid the fire 

Poured from the cannon of foreign foes ? 
Was it for this lie had dared to press 
Into the heart of the wilderness, 

And met and grappled, without a fear. 

The dangers and toils of the wild frontier ? 
Was it to die in the woods alone, 

Freezing slowly to senseless rock. 
He was saved in the perils his life had known, 

And spared by the Indian's tomahawk ? 

Ah, liow cruel seemed all on eai'th ! 

All he had prized, or loved, or known ! 
What could friendship or love be worth, 

Since they left him to die alone? 
Empty mockery seemed they then. 
Love of women and praise of men, 

False and hollow and useless all ; 

And he pierced the night with his frenzied call, 
And pushed again through the hopeless drift. 

And shouted and shrieked with his failing breath, 
Striving with desperate will to lift 

The growing stupor he knew was death. 

Did his heart go back to his fresher years, 
His early manhood, — his children twain, 

Who long with questions and sobs and tears 
Would wait his coming and wait in vain, 

Afar in their Massachusetts home ? 

Or did his wavering memory roam 

To the few bright days of his wedded life. 
And linger last with his long-lost wife ? 

Haply her love's serene control, 

Hovering near him, a helpful power. 

Lent new strength to the tortured soul 
At war with fate in that dreadful hour. 



HISTORY OF LIVERMORB. 

Utterly wearied out, at length, 

He paused by the roots of a fallen pine, 
Yet strove with his last remaining strength 

To leave some record, or trace, or sign. 
For those who would seek and find him there ; 
On a half-burned stump, by the wind blown bare, 
With his trusty knife in the nerveless hold 
Of fingers stifl" with the cruel cold, 
He tried to fashion a word — in vain — 

The knife escaped from his frozen hand. 
And his feeble message of love and pain 
No mortal ever could understand. 

Powerless longer to strive or shout, 

He dropped on his desolate death-bed there ; 
The final flicker of hope went out 

And left him alone with his black despair. 
Little he thought, as he slowly sunk 
Down to die by the pine tree's trunk, 
With never a helping hand to save 
Or beckon him back from his snowy grave- 
Little he dreamed, on his pillow cold, 

That after the lapse of a hundred years, 
His mournful story would still be told, 
With tender pity and many tears. 

Sweetly a strange delirium stole 

The sense of anguish and pain away ; 

For a merciful moment, across his soul, 
A wondrous vision of summer lay ; 

The sunshine warm on the sweet pine woods. 

The murmur of wide, green solitudes. 

The glancing leaves by the breezes stirred, 
The gurgle of brook and the song of bird ; 

Softly the fluttering pulse grew still. 
As spent waves die on a pleasant shore ; 

The wrathful tempest had wrought its will. 
And the cold and darkness vexed no more. 



123 



124 



HISTORY OF LIYEEMOEE. 

And the merciless snow kept on and on, 
And draped his bed with a curtain white, 

And covered his cold cheek, pale and wan ; 
And three days after, at fall of night — 

When a flying rumor of dread and fear 

Had startled the settlers far and near. 
And sore alarmed at his long delay. 
They followed his track where he lost the way^ 

They found him frozen and stark, and bore, 
With awe-struck faces and whispered speech, 

His stiffened form to the very door 

He had tried so vainly and long to reach. 

There in the evening firelight warm. 

They thawed the frost from his rigid limbs, 
And gently straightened his poor bent form ; 

And with prayer, and sermon, and quaint old hymns. 
Their fitting and simple burial rite, , 

They buried him in his sweetheart's sight ; ^ 

With tender reverence they laid him down 

Near her dwelling in Winthrop town. 
His grave was nameless, and none may know. 

So many the changing years have been. 
Where the kind earth opened, so long ago. 

Her warm, brown bosom and took him in. 

Scarce remembered and seldom told, 

Even in the homes of the self-same town 
Where the traveler died of the bitter cold, 

Is the sorrowful history here set down. 
The mournful story of Thomas Fish ; 
Yet oft indulging my childish wish, 

My fixther told me the legend true 

When fiercely the mad Maine snow-storms blew; 
The tale of the gallant pioneer, 

Frozen to death in the driving snow 
Of the winter midnight, wild and drear. 

Almost a hundred years ago. 



APPENDIX. 



Petition of Samuel Livermore and others, Committee, for 
A JS'ew Grant — Kesolve of General Court — Order for Se- 
lection AND Location. 

Province of the Massachusetts Bay. 

To the hon'''^ Thos. Hutchinson, Esq^, Lieut. Governor and Com- 
mander in Chief in and over said Province to the hon"* his Majesty's 
Council and House of Eepresentatives in General Court assembled the 
29 day of Oct. 1770. 

The Petition and Kemonstrance of Samuel Livermore, Leonard Wil- 
hams, and George Badcock, a Committee appointed by a Society who 
were Proprietors of a Township of Land granted to ISTath'l Harris, Esq'., 
and others by said General Court in the year 1736, as a gratuity for their 
service in the Eeduction of Port Eoyal, humbly sheweth. That the said 
Proprietors in observance of the condition of their Grant proceeded to 
lay out said Township and returned a plan of the same to the same 
Court for their approbation which was approved of by them according- 
ly; That then the Grantees proceeded to perform the conditions of their 
Grant by allotting out the house lots, and some began to build thereon, 
and repaired to said town with design to dwell there, clear'd roads and 
built a saw-mill at the charge of the Proprietors, with many other 
charges, in the whole amounting to more than £1,000 of the then cur- 
rency, as by the Book of Records of said Proprietors clearly appears, 
besides their expence of time and labour. But yet it happen'd that a 
war broke out and many of the inhabitants were killed, others taken 
captive, others surprized and discouraged; and immediately by the set- 
tlement of the bounds between this Province and the Province of 'New 
Hampshire, to our great loss and disappointment, the town fell within 
the bounds of Kew Hampshire Province, whereby the Proprietors were 
wholly deprived of all the profit and advantages they expected to reap 
and enjoy for their services aforesaid, and suffered great loss not only 



126 APPENDIX. 

in time but in money in laying out their lotts, clearing roads, &c., and 
have no way to obtain relief but by the interposition of your Honors. 
Your Petitioners therefore pray your Honors would take the same into 
your wise consideration, and appoint a committee to enquire into the 
equity of our claims and also the claims of several others who were in 
the same expedition, but have received no favor therefor, and who de- 
sire to be admitted with us, and grant leave to remove ovir pitch to some 
other place in some of the unappropriated lands in said Province, and 
your Petitioners as in duty bound shall ever pray, &c. 

Samuel Livermore,") 
Leonard Williams, > Committee. 
George Badcock, ) 

The Committee to whom was referred the Petition of Samuel Liver- 
more, Esq'., and others have enquired into the facts therein set forth 
and judge them to be true, and therefore are of opinion that the follow- 
ing Kesolve pass: 

In the House of Kepresentatives June 11, 1771, Resolved that the 
Prayer of this Petition be granted, and that there be granted to the 
I'etitioners, and to the assigns or legal representatives of the original 
Grantees in said Petition mentioned, their heirs and assigns, a township 
of the contents of six miles and three-quarters square, in some of the 
unappropriated lands in the Province of Maine to the eastward of Saco 
River, adjoining to some former Grant, to satisfy the Grant of a Town- 
ship therein mentioned, which they lost by the running of the line be- 
tween this Province and the Province of New Hampshire, and that the 
Petitioners at the cost of themselves and their associates cause the same 
to be laid out by a skilful surveyor and chainmen under oath and return 
a Plan of the same to this Court for their acceptance within twelve 
months, and the said Grantees shall hold the same to themselves, their 
heirs and assigns forever, upon the following conditions, viz.: That the 
Grantees within seven years settle sixty families in said Township, build 
a house for the public worship of God and settle a learned Protestant 
minister, and lay out one sixty-fourth part for the first settled minister, 
one sixty-fourth jiart for the ministry, one sixty-fourth j)art for the use 
of schools, and one sixty-fourth part for the use of Harvard College for- 
ever.* 

Sent up for concurrence. T. Gushing, Speaker. 

In Council June 11, 1771. Read and concurred. T. Flucker, Sec. 

Consented to. T. Hutchinson. 

A true copy. Attest Thos. Flucker, Secretary. 

Record the above copy. Per Leonard Williams, Propr's Clerk. 

*A further time for the performance of these conditions was allowed by the Legislature of 
Massachusetts,_by Resolve June 17, 1779. 



APPENDIX. 



127 



To Lieut. Elijah Livermore and Mr. Elisha Harrington. 

Gentlemen", — By virtue of the Power vested in us by the foregoing 
Grant we appoint you jointly to lay out said Township, with such other 
assistance as you shall tind necessary, with the following instructions, 
that you go directly to Brunswick Falls. On your way thither call at 
Col. Bagley's, get what information you can of him, both as to the best 
land and best place. At Casco Bay consult likewise with Capt. Jones, 
and get what knowledge you can. At Brunswick take a Boat or Battoe 
and a skilful Pilot, go up Androscoggin River, see what the navigation 
is, proceed up as far as Eocky Meco, explore the distance from any 
Grant; if the land is good and will make a good Township lay one out 
9 mile and forty rods long, and five mile wide if you can adjoin it any 
former Grant; if not and by extending to ten miles and ^ long you can 
obtain the Intervale lay it out there ten miles and ^ long and four miles 
and ^ wide. If the land will not suit go up Little Androscoggin River ; 
if the land will there suit lay it out under the same instructions. If you 
cannot obtain a Township there, take the best advice and best Pilots you 
can and lay it out in the best place and manner you can. We likewise 
appoint you, Mr. Elisha Harrington, Surveyor of said Township with 
power with the concurrence of Mr. Livermore to appoint and agree with 
some other skilful Surveyor to compleat said survey if you should be 
called off before you have compleated the same. We expect you will 
compleat a Plan of said Township and send or bring it to us as soon as 
possible that we may present the same to the General Court for their 
acceptance. 
Given under our Hands this ninth day of August 1771. 

Samuel Livermore, 
Leonard Williams. 



128 



APPENDIX. 



B 

The names of the original Proprietors of the Township No. 2, for 
which this on Androscoggin Kiver is granted as an equivalent, together 
with the names of the persons who claim under them and to whom the 
right of the original Proprietors are sold for payment of taxes. 



Original Proprietors of No. 2. 



Persons claiming under said Proprietors and 
persons to wliom rights are sold for pay- 
ment of taxes. 



Nathl. Harris, Esq., his son, Stephen Harris. 

Capt. Samuel Googen, sold for forty 

shillings to James Kettle. 

Capt. Benj. Flagg, sold for payment 

of taxes to Capt. Benj. Flagg. 

Capt. Ebenezer Woodward, sold for 

payment of taxes to Kichard Woodward. 

Capt. Ebenezer Learnard, his son, Capt. Ebenezer Learnard, 

Capt. John Hazzeltine, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to Asa Hazzeltine. 

Thomas Gibbs, sold for payment of 

taxes to Capt. Ebenezer Learnard 

Jonas Ward, himself, Jonas Ward. 

Ebenezer Whiiople, sold for payment 

of taxes to William Campbell. 

Ensign Thomas Harrington, his son, Thomas Harrington. 

Lieut. Samuel Lyon, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to 

William Cheaney, 

James Colburn, sold for payment of 
taxes to 

Ebenezer Lyon, sold for payment of 
taxes to 

Dea. Thomas Marshall, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to 

Lt. Jerijah Wales, sold for payment 
of taxes to 

John Sawin, sold for payment of 
taxes to 

John Ward, sold for payment of 
taxes to 

Ephraim Sautle, sold for payment 
of taxes to 



Thomas Fish. 

his son, Thomas Cheaney. 



John Clark, Jun'r. 
John Clark, Jun'r. 
Ebenezer Marshall. 
Isaac Gleason. 
Daniel Sawin. 
John Clark, Jun'r. 
Isaac Gleason. 



APPENDIX. 129 

Persons claiming under said Proprietors and 
Original Proprietors of No. 2. persons to whom rights are sold for pay- 

ment of taxes. 

Isaac Parker, sold for payment of 

taxes to Isaac Gleason. 

Jonathan Gates, sold for payment of 

taxes to Elijah Livermore. 

John Stearns, sold for payment of 

taxes to Capt. Benjamin Flagg. 

Jonathan Wellington, himself, Jonathan Wellington. 

Nath'l Davis, sold for payment of 

taxes to Kichard Woodward. 

Eliphelet Lyon, sold for payment of 

taxes to Simeon Pond. 

Wd. Hannah Badcock, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to John Badcock. 

Josiah Sautle, sold for payment of 

taxes to David Haven. 

Nath'l Whitmore, Asa Hazzeltine. 

Ebenezer Hartshorn, Samuel Livermore, Esq. 

John Harwood, sold for payment of 

taxes to John Clark, Jun'r. 

Eev. John Whiting, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to William Badcock. 

Daniel Googen, Esq., sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to Jabez Totnam. 

Rev. Warham Williams, his son, Leonard Williams, Esq. 

Thomas Marshall, sold for payment 

of taxes to John Clark, Jun'r. 

Ebenezer Hubbard, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to Capt. Thomas Denny. 

William Chubb, sold for payment of 

taxes to Isaac Gleason. 

John Maddock, sold for payment of 

taxes to Capt. John Fuller. 

Ensign Joseph Fuller, his son, Abraham Fuller, Esq. 

Thomas Bobbins, sold for payment 

of taxes to Capt. Thomas Denny. 

Samuel Smith, sold for payment of 

taxes to Samuel Smith Learnard. 

Peter Lyon, sold for payment of 

taxes to Isaac Gleason. 

Benjamin Munroe, his son, Benjamin Munroe. 



130 



APPENDIX. 



Original Proprietors of No. 2. 



Persona claiminfj under said Proprietors and 
persons to whom rights are sold for pay- 
ment of taxes. 



Joua. Ball, sold for iiayment of taxes 

to John Ball. 

Kath'l Dike, sold to Anthony Dike 

Bemus Woodward, sold for payment 

of taxes to Isaac Gleason. 

Dea. Ebenezer Goodhue, sold for 

payment of taxes to 
Benjamin Wood, sold for payment 

of taxes to 
William Robinson, sold for payment 

of taxes to 
Benjamin Corey, 
John Cager, sold for payment of 

taxes to 
Nathan Whipple, sold for payment 

of taxes to 
Israel Reese, sold for payment of 

taxes to 
Peter Hunt, sold for payment of 

taxes to 
John Ramsey, sold for payment of 

taxes to 
Benjamin Chadwick, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to 
David Knap, to 
Benjamin Aldridge, sold for pay- 
ment of taxes to Isaac Gleason. 
William Puffer, sold for payment of 

taxes to Seth Adams. 

The foregoing extract from the Proprietors' Records was entered 
therein in 1771. Between that time and 1779 a large number of 
rights or shares came to Dea. Elijah Liverraore by purchase at tax 
sales and from individual proprietors. 



John Clark, Jun'r. 

John Clark, Jun'r. 

Elisha Harrington. 
Asa Hezzeltine. 

John Clark, Jun'r. 

Isaac Gleason. 

Lt. Elijah Livermore. 

Moses Stone, Jun'r. 

Isaac Gleason. 

Lt. Elijah Livermore. 
Jeremiah Whittemore. 



APPENDIX. 131 

c 

A GOTJRNAL of our Joumay To Lot out our Toivnship on Anclroscoggen 
Tiiver. 

Set out from Waltham for Boston Tuesday August 18, 1772, waited 
for fair wind till Fryday S of clock in the morning Then set sail in a fine 
Large Sloop Called the Feuix and had a very good voige Landed near 
CoUon Lithgros miles U]^ Kenebeck Eiver on the next Day about four 
o clock Afternoon, 

23 Set sail 3 o clock Afternoon went to merry meeting Bay. 

24 Set sail 6 o clock morning and that Tide went to Pownalboro, next 
Tide went to Gardner town. 

25 Set sail 7 o clock Kan up to Bombay Hook* where we Ran a 
ground at the turn of Tide then took our stores in Boat up to Snows a 
mile Below Fort western. About 5 o clock Fish and I went forward 
about 4 mile in order to procure a battoe for our use ether to buy or 
make or Borrow. 

26 a rainy morning spent the whole day without success. 

27 our Store arrived at Winthrop about noon wee Bought boards to 
make a Battoo then went to Mr. Frosts about 2 mile from Wilson pond. 

28 wee Hired Icabud How to help us wee paid our Teamster Mr. 
How and Fish began the battoo and the rest carried the stores forward 
toward the pond. 

29 battoo finished about noon then lanched into said pond and got 
safe over about Sunset.f 

Lots on the east side of the river were laid out in the months of Sep- 
tember and October, 1772, by Ebenezer Waters, surveyor, and Elijah 
Livermore and Richard Woodward, chainmen. 

Accounts of parties connected with the survey of 1772 as allowed and 
paid: 

Ebenezer Waters, £19 

Capt. Ebenezer Learned, 18 6s. 

Richard Woodward, 22 

Lieut. Elijah Livermore, 46 3s. 8d. 

Thomas Fish, 7 18s. 

*Hallowell. 

tit is not certainly known who made these entries. They are in a small memorandum book 
that was in possession of Dea. Livermore ; but they are not in his hand writing. There are 
many other entries in the book, some of which seem to have been made by a " Sudbiiry-Cana- 
da" man. The ones here given were undoubtedly made by Ebenezer Waters, Capt. Learned, 
or Mr. Woodward. 



132 APPENDIX. 

D 

JOURNAL OF THOMAS FISH. 

Thos. Fish his Book price 7s. 6cl. of Oxford in the County of Worces- 
ter New England. 

Jornal from Oxford to Androscoggen River April 26, 1773. Left Ox- 
ford Dinner at Loged at Framinham. 

27 to Boston Spoak for a passage a Board of Capt John Martins 
Sloop, Name the Salley, Belonging to Falmouth. 

28 Got our Stores ahoard waiting for a fare wind. 

29 waiting for a fare wind. 

30 Sailed 7 o the clock in the morning came of aganst Dear Ireland 
head wind. 

May 1 Day 1773 Saild half after 8 and at Sun Set of agains Epswech 
bay Ninty six Saile of Vessels all In Sight at once pleasant weather 
fare wind but Small. 

2 Sunday In at Falmouth at one of the clock afternoon three o clock 
come To an ancer at Town. 

May 3rd Day 1773 got our stoares out of the Vessel and Stoard them 
In Mr Shattucks Store Left Falmouth 2 o the clock On the afternoon 
Traveld Eleven miles and cared our packs very heavey Loged at Mr 
Joseph Latens North Casco. 

4th Traveld 4 miles | throw the woods before Breakfast killed one 
piggon and Eat for Breakfast at Knight at Mr Stinchfield of New 
Gloucester Very hot weather met Mr Livermores Team a going after 
thee Rest of the Stoars Left Behind. 

5th Set out for our township Mr James Stinchfleld our pillot D. 
Mixer Thos. Fish Willm Foster Ebiz Gleas (on?) Lieut. Livermore be- 
hind to bring up our Stores traviled to Little Amascoggen 9 mile from 
New Goucester waided the River Willm Foster fell in to the River all 
over with 3 axes and a grait coat on his Shoulders Killed 4 Pigons one 
patrage campt by great Wilson pond 30 miles to Little amascoggen* 
meashuard by the chain 9 miles to wilson pond, In wading I wet my 
watch in the works and Did Not stop and take water out. 

6th Day began to clear our Road Set the woods af fire and burnt our 
gun stick Lay very coald for our Blankets is behind with our Stores. 

7th Day Lieut Livermore and his hands come to us at Ten of the 
cloack with stores and had bad luck In crosing Little amasoggen River 

*Probably from Falmouth. 



APPENDIX. 133 

and fell In with one hors and our Stores (were) Yary much wet and 
Left us at 2 of the Cloack and Keturnd after more Stores Claard the 
Road to a large Brook Vary Bad pasing till thare is a bridg built — the 
1st Day of may Lieut Livermore Left Falmouth with his Team and 
hands. 

8 Still at worck on our Road Kild 2 patriges cetch Fish — Encampt by 
a pleasant pond our pilot Returd to us at Sun Set, marked the Road out. 

9 Sunday morning our pilot Left us he was In our Emplouy 3 Days 
besides Sunday to goe home in — Delivrd Mr James Stinchfield my Deed 
to Keep or Leave at the Registers office In Falmouth if he has opertu- 
nyty To get Recorded Deed of my Land In port Royal Township — this 
Knight vary sharp Litning and Thunder vary hard Til about 12 o the 
clock. 

10 Clearing our Road vary much Tormented with the flys — hot Day 
thunder and Litning veary hard and Sharp til midnite much Rain Lay 
uncomfortable this Knight Cleard the Road within one mile of 20 mile 
River bad Logs by the mile to gather to cut out of the Road we have 
Not Eat but 2 meals of Solt provistion Since we have been In the woods 
Fish and patridges plenty Saw whare the thunder Struck a tree not far 
from our camp Last Knight, 

11 Clearing Road — this Knight Phipses Cannaday Comraitees campt 
with us, bound up to theire Towship to Loting out, 

12 Lieut Livermore and his hands come to us about Ten o the clock 
forenoon, this Knight Rany. 

13 Day Lieut Livermore crost the Twenty mile River with 4 oxen 1 
hors — this Day caryd our Bagage over Dito River and Encampt Near 
the River, crost with the Road at three o the clock. Rany Knight. 

14 Rany morning Rany all Day Encampt on the East side of 20 mile 
River Fish plenty Trouts vary Large and plenty Lay hear with our 
Blangkets Strecht all Day. 

15 Lieut Livermoor and I Sett out in order to vew the Land for the 
Rod In To our Township about 15 miles the way we went and it Raind 
Some when we Set out and was as rainy a Day as a most Ever I New 
and Lieut Livermoor went to goe Round a Swamp to se if the Land 
would not beter acomadate for the Road and got Lost from (us) and I 
Hr'd three guns and continued hollering for 2 hours and half by Times 
before he came to me and then we Sett out towerds and arived at our 
ground camp at Dusk — but Like to have Layd in the wood all Knight 
without fire but to our grait Jouy Mr How of pond Town was thare a 
Sleep in my old Saw bunk I had thare the Last year and had a good fire 
and I puld of my Shirt and Rung it as Dry as I could and warmed it 
and put on again and I Did the same by my Blanket and Lay Down in 
my wet cloaths and Rested as comfortable as I could — we wet our plan 

10 



134 APPENDIX. 

and it come into 9 peces which cost us some Trovible having no other 
with us. 

16. Sunday Keturned to our people to 20 mile Kiver— by the misfor- 
ting we had a Satturday we was oblige to Return for want of provistion 
and I Snapt my gun at a Large buck moose well Loaded with a ball but 
the powder being wet a saterday and Damp to my grait Sorow Did not 
goe off and Ileturd to our peopell and all Avas well with them and found 
them Eating Som hot patrige Broath whitch Did not com a mis to us 
also for we had not Eat any hot victtuls Since we left them. 

17 munday went with Lieut Livermoore to help iiim Drive his cattle 
Into Town and got along vary well Except his hors fell Down and cut 
his Knee and Lamed himself — got within about one mile of camp at 
Dusk and haveiug a grait mind to git in to our camp (we) on yoak our 
oxen and I set my compas and it being so Dark that I could not Se the 
Needle but Tuck East to be West and Sheard of about one mile and 
Struck the grait meadow and was oblige to Ly on an Island in the 
raadow and after Long Trial we got fire but had Noe ax with us Nor 
provition — Sum Rany but we Campt Down as well as we cold and 
Starved it out haveing eat Noe hot victtuls Since morning but wished 
for Day Light before it com — arived at our grand camp Eight o clock 
morning. 

18 Tusday a Loocking over the Town to find whare will best aconio- 
date for the Road — patridges or pigons almost Every Day the Dog came 
a croast a pocapine and filled his nose with Quills. 

19 Wensday Returned to Silvester to our people and arived thare 
about 5 o the clock and Jest before I got thare the Dog Stole Sum 
Chease and converted it to his own use and as he broack the Law he 
Reed his punishment Jest as I arived and in about one hour after he 
Tread a vary Large pocopine and I Shot it and Skiud it and he Stoed 
the whole Body (in) to him that he nead not Steal no more provition. 

20 Thusday about the oald Task daring Road past a Large Brook- 
about 12 o the clock bagane to Raine Set in araining and Beat us of 
from our worck before Knight Vary Rany and uncomfortable weather 
for our Busness 14 & loth Days all our hands Lay by by Reason of Rain 
besides sevaral other times part of a Day. this Day we had patrige for 
Diner and after we had Dind I Tuck the gun and went about 100 Rods 
from the camp and Kild 2 more for the Next Day — our famyly is small 
Nobody hear but Foster and Gleason and I — father Mixer and Lieut 
Livermore and his hands Left us the 17th Day to goe to our New Ox- 
ford Ryal to plant corn and prottous (potatoes)— this Time a Drawing a 
plan of our Town by the oald peacess that was wet and made out So as 
that it will answer our Town at this time. 

21 Set out to goe for Stores to Little andrascoggen River to Mr Lanes 



APPENDIX. 



135 



arived thare Jest before Knight and put up our Stores for marching the 
N^ext moning. 

22 Day Satturday Set out heavy Load upon our Back But we had one 
cag we cald the Bull which helpt us cary the Rest at Every Spring we 
Eluded the Bull we come Twelve mile and Night com on. 

23 Sunday arived at our camp this morning and found all things well. 
2-1: Day monday moved forard on our Road about 1 mile and haf about 

2 the Cloack thare come up a Thunder Shoure and Raine and Thunder 
Vary hard Sharp Litning, Rand till Knight. 

25 Tusday pleasant and cold and the flyes Did not bite So bad as 
useyal. 

26 Wensday or Election and vary Rany and noe Bread nor meal 
Some croas and crocked Went Into our Town. Rany all the way and 
arived at the Grand Camp about Two o cloack — Lieut Livermore had 
Jest Killed a fat calf and the Sight of the calf with other good Neacce- 
carys made us (in) as good condition as Ever — hear we found Phipses 
cannaday men come to Se us also. To spend a few Soshable hours with 
us and Thay told us that thay Kild a fat calf the Day before to Keep 
Election with, but thare cow Run away into the wood wild and thay had 
not milked hir since thay Kild the calf, but not Somuch to be wonderd 
at for she was of the Natives of the Land thare — So we had som further 
Discorse about flyes thay asked me if I had Sean any and I tould them 
I had Sean a few but thay would not beleve me had not my check and 
face and hands ben almost Raw whitch proved that I Spoack the Truth. 
I Should not ben cald one of Varassatay by them So after a little past 
time In Eating Some fresh Veal and Drinking Some W. Enda Toddy 
we parted with our Neabours we went to grinding our axes for the Next 
Days Servis. 

27 thusday the hands at work on the Road Next to the River for Ave 
cold not git any meal to cary out with us but expect Som Tomorow 
from pond Town by Mr How and I went up to the meating house Lot 
and Layd out the Road and marked Down to the Entervale. 

28 the ould Task and thar come a Scout of Gnats Down upon us this 
Day the first we have Sean and we expect thousands Directly, the Black 
flyes Seam to abate, but the muscatoes are Vary Numer's among us and 
a grait many of them will weigh half a pound — not apeace tho' — the wind 
Vary high to Day So that we amagin (imagine) Mr how could not cros 
ammascogen pond that our meal is not come. 

29 Satturday at worck at the Road till 12 of the clock. Left Foster to 
fech out Some meal and Gleason and I went out to our camp In Silves- 
ter for we was afraid the wild Beasts would Distrouy our Stores and 
cloaths if we Left them thare any Longer and we markd the Road 5 
hundred Road acroast 5 Lots and got to our camp Jest as the Sun Sot 



136 APPENDIX. 

one mile and a half from our Town Line into Silvester and found all 
things well but Noe meal nor Bread. 

30 Sunday this moning made a Breakefast of Chocolate and Buter 
and Chease but noe Bread, Diner Noe Bread but about 2 o the Cloack 
we heard a cracking in the Brush and I tuck the gun into my hand 
thinking it to be a moose but as sone as it came in Sight Who Should it 
be but our Nabour Foster with half a bushel of meal to his Back whitch 
Rejoyst us as much as the Sight of a moose it Semes he thoat marcy 
was before Sacrillse tho it was Sunday he new we had Noe bread and 
Soe come out to us. 

31 Monday unfortanate to and Remarkable — Foster cut his Knee or 
Jest above his Knee throuw 3 thicknesses of garter, Trowsers 1 thick- 
ness, Stocken 2 thicknesses. Not vary bad it was cut half after Nine 
and ten minets after Eleven he came vary Near being Kild and (was) 
Remarkably preserved. I was afelling a tree about 20 Inches throu 
varay Tall and when I found thee tree was agoing I give the word — 
Take care, and foster was about 4 Road frome me upon a Log about 3 
feet from the ground and Stood and Looked of the tree as it was a fall- 
ing and the tree fell on the Log he was on and gave it a cant and Turnd 
him Rite under the Tree he fell Right under a Log he was on and 
buckled him up Into a heep and the tree Settled on him and Struck the 
Breath out of his Body and Stouuded him and the ax fioe out of his 
hand about eight feet from him and he was In that posistion that he 
could not help him Self and Gleason Lifted the Log about one Inch and 
I Turnd his head it being buckled under his Body So that as he come 
(to) he could Jest help him Self So as to get out — hurt his Shoulder 
Some and Beat his Leg Black and Blue and give his whole Body a uni- 
vers (al) Shock. 

June 1 Day Tusday Rany this morning till after Nine — went to worck 
and about three o cloack Beat of by Rane and a good Deal of thunder 
but not Near — com home to our camp and Sett the girles to washing 
and Keep them washing till thare finger was Sore and the Bouys tended 
the Kittels with water — the first time of washing Since we Left home, 
our Linnings and wollens Look vary White but our muslings and cam- 
bricks we thot Not best to wash to Day becaze the weather looks Dowt- 
full for Driing and we are going to move to morow and we thot it would 
make them yalow So that thay would not be fit to be Sean in the meat- 
ing hous.* 

2 Wensday Cloudy Loose Weather this morning Lowary all Day but 
we worcked all Day on the Road and fitting muscatoes till Dusk — about 
Ten o the cloack a Bare came within few Road of our camp — all a sleep 

*We have here an example of the Surveyor's humor. 



APPENDIX. 137 

but I, and I Let him come prity N"ear and waked the Dog thinking he 
might Tree him and he Stood and Snuffed a Spell and I Tuck the gun 
in my hand and the Dog Jumpt Into the Bruech (brush) about three 
Road and come back frited allmost to Death and yeald with his Brussels 
Stuck up and he Laramed (alarmed) all our camp and I Let him out 
and he folloed him of a Spell and com back againe glad he was alive and 
we had IN'oe Little Laff of our Suprize and the fear the dog Sustaned for 
a fue minits — we cleard the Road into our Township this Day, 

3 Day Thusday Rany amost al Day but we movd about 2 mile and ^ 
mile into our Town. 

4 Friday old worck Broak 1 ax to Day. 

5 Day Sattur Day I went into Town to grind Fosters Ax broack yes- 
terday and the flyes bit me the worst I have ben bit Since 1 have ben in 
the woods — a woolf com and hould Round our camp and made much 
Rout amongus. 

6 Day Sunday. 

7 Day monday about 10 o the Clock Phipses Cannaday men come to 
VIS and thay Kooked thare Dinner at oure house and was bound home all 
harty and after we had Drunk a Little Brandy Toddy and Eat Diner to 
gather we parted. This after None I moved all our housing Stuff with 
our provition with a little help 2 mile. 

8 Day Tusday this after N^oon the Dog Kiled a pocopine and filled his 
mouth full of quiles and caused a good Deal of Truble to get them out 
of his mouth we tied his legs and gaged him and worcked about an 
houre upon him and he was vary glad after it was over. 

9 Day Wensday this Day cloudy afternoon Rany Knight and the wind 
Blue So that we was afraid to go to Sleep but Keept awake all Night 
amost for feare of being Kild by the Trees. 

10 Day Thusday Traviled in to Lieut Livermoores for we was afraid 
to Stay in the woods any Longer the Trees fell so — cleard of about 
Noon and we Returnd again to camp. 

11 Friday at work at the Road went in to our camp at Knight (Ex- 
pected) whare Mr How had markd our Road from Winthrop. 

12 Day Satturday Rany in the foorenoon afernoon at worck at the 
Road. 

13 Day Sunday Set out to Wintrup 10 o the cloack Struck our Town 
Line In the Loar of Tyall somwar near whare it crosses a bever Dam 
and folod it about Two mile and Steard of E S E and Struck a pond and 
thoat it was great andresscoggen pond and steard of E S E and Struck 
Dead River about half after one and Still Steard our corse and Struck 
Wintrup North part of the Town one nir Earses (Sears' V) Improvement 
— Vary Rany and Struck this improvement about foure o the clock hin- 
dred by the Raine so that we Did not git to mr Hows till Knight. 



138 



APPENDIX. 



14 Day monday set out at one of the clock to mark oure Koad to poart 
Eoyal and at Knight campt by grait anderascoggin pond and as we was 
En camping we heard Something growling Like a bare and we went of 
from our camp and we found 2 cubs up on a Tree and I shot one of 
them and mr how Shoat the other and we had Som for brakefast and 
had a vary good brakefast. 

Road finished to Day. 

15 Day Tusday Set out this morning and Struck the River by fishes 
Iseland about Eleven o the cloack — 1 (o'clock) our hands Washing up 
for hom. 

16 Day wensday after Lieut Livermoores cattle that was runaway 
Steard of about 12 o the cloack Struck thare Tracks and follow of after 
them till Sun Set but could Kot over take them our hands cutting a 
Road to the falls and campt with out Blanket or Victuals Kext Day I 
got in ]t«rext Day. 

17 Thusday at Eleven o the clock 24 hours without any victules Ex- 
cept one pan cake this afternoon packed up our things for marching 
home about the Sun Set foure miles on our Jorney Som Raine and thun- 
der. 

18 Fryday got into Mr Laines about the middle of the afternoon and 
Refreshed our Selves and Rested our Selves at Little andrew Soggen 
River. 

19 Saturday crost the River and got to Mr Stinchfield about Eleven o 
the Clock and Refreshed ourselvs and Sot of for falmouth Traveled to 
Mr Winslows in North casko and Loged thare. 

20 Sunday at falmouth afternoon went to church* Quarterd at Mr 
Shattucks. 

21 Day Monday and Looking out for a pasage found 2 Vesels Liakely 
to Saile in 2 or three Days but it happend that a Yesel from Canybeck 
fell in with the Land in the foog and put In to falmouth to fill water 
and we axadantally Se the Capt and agreed with him for a pasage and 
put our Stoares a board in about 15 minits and Sailed down the harbour 
but for want of wind we was oblige to come to an anker againe we 
Sailed at Sunsett and come to about Nine o the clock. 

22 Day Tusday Lay wind bound and went a shoare againe — about five 
o the clock the wind com Round to the Nox'ord and we com to Saile and 
went out of the harbour fare wind but Small. 

23 wensday Still on our pasage Small wind but pleasant the Sun about 
an houre high thare com up a Small Squall Som thunder and Raine 
plasant Knight. 

24 thusday this morning Round cape pan Beating all Day Small 

♦They probably heard Parson Smith preach. 



APPENDIX. ^'^'^ 



Brease part of the Time Lashed to a vesell Becalmed about T^n o the 
clock got within the Light and Run up to gorges Island and it Died 
away calm and we Run on the Island but the Tide being flowing we go 
of Sone without any Damage-and com too above Long Island for want 
of winde about Day Light and Lay till the Next Tide. 

25 Fryday about 2 o the clock come to toing m Leue (lieu) of comm, 
to Saile for we had Noe wind and at fore o the clock ^ve Landed our 
Bacace and Foster and I Set out for home and went to Lieut Liver- 
moore of waltham about 10 o the clock In the Evening. 

26 Satturday vary hot-and Traviled home-Vary hard Days work fox 



me. 



Journal of a second visit to Port Royal in 1773. 

\u-ust 23 Day* To winthoop to attend Town meeting to Se if thay 
woullLay out road to meat ours 29 Sunday 30th at Town meting 31 

monday horn againe. , . 

Sept 3 Day 1773 To vew the Road Mr How markd to Se if I cold not 

Sheer the Swamppy land But found Noe way Nor found Noe way to 

crose fishes Brook with a bridge. 

4 Day to the Southard of the marks but found Noe way fox the Road 

to o-oe Near the marks. „v^„f i 

6 Day up fishes Brook aod found it could Be pasd by a Bndge about 1 
JeJf^maeBiverStruokof for Bevev Brook aud found whare .t 
could be forded about 2 miles from the Eiver. , , c, if ,1,. 

7 Day marked from fishes Brook to Bever Dito and vewd o Se if the 
Road lid come from fishes Brook to the Biver and found yary good 

'' 8 DaTweftt Beaver Brook and markd E S E and Struck our Town 
Unclurs miles from grate Andarsscoggen Pond and went to 80 mde 
Eiver to Se if the Road could Not goe furtlrer to the E and Koith to 
Rriiw it Strait with my marks but found a vary Swamp. 

Day Tuck a beaclr hill Near our Town Line and found .t went up 
with a modret assent and Doun with a modoret Desent and markd 
North about 2 miles to Beaver Brook and Struck my marks about half a 
mile to the west of our Town Line. 

Octobr 5 1773 to wintrup to Let out and See a Bout a Bridge. 

rCto Mr Craigg Let out the Bridge to Mr Craigg Struck of west 
and By Southard and Struck Brags Lot. 

7 Day home and vewed the Road with Mr How. 



♦Major Fish seems to have returned to Maine iu August. 



140 



APrENDIX. 



Reed of Capt Brown Mr whitemore Mr googe peirse commitc to 
Phips Cannayday 4 axes 

Markd S. W. 
Reed at Poart Royal 2 Md Huds W 

to take care of 1 Meat Tub 

but not to 1 Butter Dito 

hazard 2 Keggs Mkd A. B. 

1 Box of Mr Ivory 
Octobr ye 12d 
1773 



A Memarandom From Oxford to poart Royal. 

April 18 Day 1774 Sett out for Boston Dind at Grafton at Knight at 
waltham at Deacon Livermores. 

19th to Boston to Look for a pasage Lodged at the Sign of the Lamb 
— Vary hard Thunder and Lightning. 

20th found a pasage a Board of Capt John Campbell Sloop her Kame 
the Polly Traveled up to waltham to Deacon Livermores and thared 
Lodged, 

21 Thusday to Boston a hying Stores Lodged at the sign of the Lamb. 

22d Bying Stores and waiting for a pasage. 

23 Satturday got oure Stores aboard and a q. after 8 Eight in the 
Evining come to Sail. 

24 Sunday maid wood Island and at Six o clock in the Evening Stode 
in for Seguin at 12 o the clock com to an anker in the mouth Kanebeck 
River at Knight. 

25th Nine o the clock in the morning come to Saile the wind a head 
beat up the River about five mile the tide faileing us we come too. 

26 Beat up the River to Long Reach Left the Sloop and went up the 
River with Mr Suel in his Boat Arived at Mr Agraves at ten o the clock 
at Knight at Pownalborough much vary Soar hands a Roing. 

27 Road up the River against a very Swift freshet to Deacon Clarks 
Travelled to winthrup to hyer a Teame to fetch up our Stores hyerd Mr. 
Brag. 

28 Back to Kenebeck River and up to Winthup again Lodged at Mr. 
Whiteonge (Whitings?). 

29 to Mr Hous Set out to goe to Mr Fullers Towards our town mised 
the Right Road and went out of our way about one mile and then struck 
through the woods about 4 miles in order to Strike a bridge cald craiggs 
Bridge and Struck within Ten Rods of said bridge kiled one patterage 
on our march Encampt by fullers meadow Vary Rany Day Rany 
Knight Mr Willington Taken not well. 



APPENDIX. 



141 



Satturday went to Shoe Mr Ballard our town Line we left Mr John 
Badcok with Mr Willington Vaiy Kany Returnd to our camp found Mr 
AVillington Violently Seized with a pain in his head and much Distresd 
at his Stummuch got him into Mr Braggs. 

May ye 1st Sunday Rany went to Mr hows to Lodg. While I am now 
writting I heard credabbly that 4 men was Drownded at Versalborough 
Lieut Warring from pepperrell Deacon Browns Son of Concord the 
others unnone to me. 

2d Day went to Mr. Hopkins after my Instrements Left behind in our 
chist Bought a vary (large?) pack, come to Mr Chndlers (Chandlers) 
found Mr Willington moved from Mr Braggs to Mr Chandlers vary sick 
and Staid with him this Knight. 

3 Day measured the Road from Mr Chandlers and markd every mile 
on the Tree that it come out against on the Tres the South Side of the 
Road found the Road to be 18 mile and ^ wanting 13 Rod found our 
people campt whare 30 mile River Empties into grait Ammasoggen 
pond. 

4 Day Set out with part of our Stores and crosed Ammascoggen Pond 
went Down Dead River to greait Ammascoggen River Land our Stores 
and fired 2 guns for a token that we had arived and with much Joy thay 
Reeved the token and maid the best of thare way to us for they baud 
Not Eat any victules cooked with water. 

6 Day Set out to Run a line to the west part of our town. 

6 Day Surveying and Saw Some Ice in a back cove of our River Laid 
on the Bank by the freshet out of the Sun. 

7 Day went up the River and found all things well at my chest and 
Deacon Livermore well at his camp. 



MiNUTS OF THE SwAMP. — South End of the Town from Dead River 
West to Grait ammascog River 250 Rods Hard Land 200 Rods through 
Black Swamp 277 Rods Loe Land to the River. 



MiNUTS of the Roads from the S. W. corner adjoineing Silvester 
Runing S 60 E from Sd corner 86 R Struck the Road. 



142 



APPENDIX, 



COPY OF ENTRIES IN MAJ. FISH'S JOIJENAL. 

Keceived of Mr Thomas Fish & william foster the sum of twelve shil- 
len Laf ul money for there Pasages from Boston to fahnouth. 

PrMe 

John Martin. 
Falmouth May ye 3th 1773. 



Mr. Eglz Gleason to cash paid Lieut Livermore 



June the 21d 1773 Willm Foster to cash paid him at fahnouth 
June 29 1773 Paid for Mr David Mixr Board to Lieut Liver- 
more for three weaks and 1 Day 



June 28 Day 1773. 

Old T. 

3=17=6 

OldT. 

6=15=0 



L. M. 

1=2=0 



E. Gleason to Cash 

Poai'k Shuger chease 1 Purs 

Novr 4th paid 13 Dollers E Gleason to wards his wages 

Paid Willm Foster 9 Dollers his wages. 



WiNTHROP Octr ye 18 1773. 

Old T. 

2=9=6 



Mr Ebn Ballard to cash paid Deacon Livermore for Tobaco 
June ye 28 1774 



0=14=0 



July 14 Day 1773. Kecd of Lieut Elijah Livermore of Wal- 

tham to by Nales and hay seed 
Bought of Mr Marshell of Boston 4 M lOd Nailes a 47=6 

Bought of J Stevens of Winthrop 4 bushell of hay seed a 18 
Bought of Mr Chandler 3 bushell of hay seed a 18 



Old Tener 

19=0=0 
9=10=0 

3=12=0 
2=14=0 

6=16=0 



Octr ye 15 Day 1773 

Lieut Livermore Dr to order from me by David Mixer Law. 

money 7= 

Novembr 3d 1773 Settled the above acct. 



=19=6 



APPENDIX. 143 

July 1773 

Mr Icobocl How Dr Winthrop To 51b | of Chocolate 3= 0=6 

Octr ye 7 to 1 gun 18=18=0 

12 Cash paid Josiah Mixer 0= 6=0 

Cash lent 0= 9=0 
Octr ye 15 Day 1773 Eecd the above of Mr How. 



At Winthrop Abraham Merefield Dr to one Jacket old Tener 6=15=K) 
May ye 4d 1774 Abraham Merefield cr by Cash 5^10=0 

Cash 6=5 



the 3d Wensday In march 1774 Propriators meting at Mr Isaac Glea- 
sons Waltham 10 the clock. 

the 4th Wensday in In June 1774 meating of our propriators at Isaac 
Gleasons of Waltham. 



December 14 D 1773 Due Mr Ep Balard if he has i Eight 4= 3=0 

Deem 29 gave Mr Daniel Phillips my Note for the sum of 2=16=8 

payable within one year. 



NOTE ON THE COVER (INSIDE) OF MAJOR FISH'S JOURNAL. 

Doct. Noas of Boston lives near funel Hall prsebyjebscot Company. 



May 1774. 

Notes of Ammasoggen Kiver from Bever Brook abrest Long 
Island 4 Kod fro^i South End. 

R D R 

N 23 E 24 2 at 20 
N 20 E 60 2 at 40 

R 

N 5 W 20 2 00 12 

N 28 W 41 3 IJ*A°'*.''?P^^^^"^ 

i 17 Rod of ye 41 R 

N 6 E 21 2 at 10 

N 30 E 23 Falls 



144 















APPENDIX. 


N 


55 


E 


9 


2 






N 


14 


E 


33 








N 


56 


E 


18 


3 




Fall white 


K 


10 


E 


8 








N 


20 


E 


20 


6 






N 


10 


W 


25 


4 at 12 






00 
10 
33 


W 
E 


60 
54 
14 


3 




( 5 at S.'i 
} 3 51 

( 6 m 
( 2 at 20 
\ 3 20 End of these Falls 

fishes 


N 


30 


E 


6 








N 


00 




91 








N 


15 


E 


54 




Lot No 9 Bore S 82 W 


N 


37 


E 


40 


8 






N 


3 


E 


28 


4 






N 


23 


E 


34 


8 






2^ 


8 


W 


72 


4 




30 


N" 


5 


E 


20 


2 




10 


N 


30 


E 


23 


6 






N 


12 


W 


42 


6 






N" 


39 


W 


52 






( 5 20 ■ -• ^ 
7 "" 


X 


70 


W 


26 


2 


10 


( t 


N 


54 


W 


40 


2 






N 


64 


W 


88 


2 
2 


20 
40 




N" 


61 


W 


37 




28 Struck the River 


N" 


44 


W 


18 








N 


35 


W 


44 


2 


20 




N 
K 


18 
8 


W 12 
E 143 






(4 20 

^5 40 
(6 80 


N 


13 


E 


34 








N" 


18 


E 


132 






CS 40 


N 


8 


W 


22 






V" 


N 


10 


E 


41 




34 






1 
30 


W 
E 


08 
22 


6 
8 


52 


Corse struck over abont 
IRod 

against Narrow 


N 


13 


E 


34 






pasage 


N 


16 


W 


26 








N 


12 


E 


6 


3 




Met Mr Sheppard a Su 



the River from the Town Line 
between Liverton and Phippses 
Caunaday 



APPENDIX. 145 

Notes of Livermores pond In Liverton May 1774 began at 
Mr Willm Badcocs Line Running N. 









R 


Distance 


N 


28 


E 


20 


2 


K 


2 


W 


64 


4 


N 


15 


W 


20 




N 


25 


W 


24 


DRR 

( 3 20 




12 
31 


W136 
W 44 


\ 5 aO 
< 6 40 
> 10 20 
V 11 36 


N 


9 


W 


20 


4 


N" 


20 


W 


60 


14 


N 


46 


W 


32 




X 


24 


W 


24 


2 


W 

s 

s 

s 


00 

18 

11 

1 




W 
E 
E 


34 
13 

70 
14 


8 Rod to corner between 
155 & 156 Ngh 
after striking the Line 
at the N End of the pond 
15 from the pond at the end 
of 34° west 


s 


13 


E 


17 




s 


9 


E 


79 


( 5 60 
I 7 

( 6 20 
\ 4 23 

12 40 West 5 R of sett 


s 
s 


25 
36 


E 
E 


43 
60 


s 


00 





30 




s 


17 


E 


46 


8 10 


s 


00 





27 




s 


15 


w 


14 


' 


s 


12 


E 


19 


to loting Line first men 



Acrost the Pond on said Line 
S 87° 30 minutes E 
N 1° 30 minutes W 12 Rod 6 Links 
S 71° 30 minutes E 



146 APPENDIX. 

E 

SUNDEY EXTRACTS FROM THE PROPRIETARY RECORDS. 

Meeting November 3, 1773, at the house of Isaac Gleason, innholder in 
Waltham. 

Voted and chose Mr Thomas Fish to prosecute in behalf of the Pro- 
prietors to final Judgment and Execution (Facultate sxibstituendi) any 
person or persons who shall commit trespass on said Township. 

Voted that they will lay out the remainder of said Township and that 
they will lay out exclusive of what is drawn 3 Lotts of one hundred 
acres to each Right, and the remainder in equal parts to each Right, 

Voted to choose a Committee of three persons to perform said service. 

Voted and chose Dea" Elijah Livermore, Capt Ebenezer Learned 
and Mr Thomas Fish a committee for that purpose. 

Voted that the Committee now chosen sort the lotts in an equal pro- 
portion to quality as possible so that each Proprietor draw his lots at one 
draught. 

Voted that said Committee perform said service between the first day 
of next April and the first day of ISTov' next. 

Voted that they hire the Proprietors in said business provided they 
will work as reasonably seasonably and faithfully as others will. 

Voted and granted a tax of forty eight shillings on each Right to de- 
fray the expenses of settling and laying out said Township. 

Voted that one half of said tax be paid to the Treasurer at the next 
meeting of said Proprietors and the other half by the first day of next 
August. 

Voted and granted Mr Isaac Gleasons account of the expenses of this 
meeting amounting to £2 lis lid and order" the Treas' to pay it. 

Meeting at inn of Isaac Gleason, June 29, 1774. 

Voted to choose a committee to agree with some person or persons to 
build a Saw Mill and Grist Mill on said Proprietry and to engage said 
person or persons 200 dollars and 100 acres of land they giving security 
to erect a Saw Mill this year and a Grist Mill next on said Township 
and to keep them in repair the space of fifteen years and to saw for the 
Proprietors for common price and grind for lawful profits. 

Voted and chose Leonard Williams Esq' Deacon Elijah Livermore 
and Mr Elisha Elarrington a committee for said purpose. 

Voted and granted Mi to each of the ten first who shall settle families 



APPENDIX. 147 

in said Township and build a house there provided they settle there and 
build a house before the year 177G, and give security to dwell there five 
years. 

Meeting at the house of Micajah Gleason, innholder in Framingham, 
October 12, 1774. 

Voted that the Clerk be directed to record the bounds of the lots in 
said Township as they are or shall be returned by the Surveyors Eleazer 
Waters, Ephraim Ballard and Thomas Fish and with what Committees 
they perform each survey and that the clerk be directed to call upon 
Ephraim Ballard and Thomas Fish for a return of the bounds of the lots 
surveyed by them. 

At a meeting at the house of Capt. Isaac Gleason, innholder^ Wednesday, 
March 3, 1779, it was " Voted and chose Leonard Williams Esq., 
Dea. Elijah Livermore and Mr Elisha Harrington a Committee to peti- 
tion the Great and General Court for a further time to fulfil the condi- 
tions of the Grant of said township, the times having been such that it 
has been impossible to fulfil the same in the time allowed." 

This petition received a favorable answer. 

At a meeting Sept. 12, 1781, a motion was carried for a Committee of 
two to " view and rejiort where there are proper places to build mills." 

" Voted and chose Dea. Elijah Livermore and Major Thomas Fish a 
committee for said service." 

This is the last time that the name of Thomas Fish appears upon the 
proprietors' records. 

Meeting November 6, 1783. 

Voted that a committee be appointed to lay out and clear such roads 
to the inhabitants in said Township as shall be thought conducive to the 
good of said Propriety and repair the old way not to exceed thirty 
pound and lay their accounts before the Proprietors at tJieir next meet- 
ing for their acceptance. 

Voted and chose D° Elijah Livermore, Lieut Sam' Benjamin and Mr 
Daniel Holman a Committee therefor. 

Meeting at the house of Benjamin Bird, innholder in Waltham, January 
13, 1790. 

Voted to choose a committee to prefer a Petition to the General 
Court obtain Grant of land for that part of the Townshi]? which by as- 
certaining the bounds between said Township and the town of Turner 
now falls into the town of Turner. 

Voted and chose Dea° Elijah Livermore Leonard Williams Esq' and 
Daniel Holman a committee therefor. 



148 APPENDIX. 

F 

Copy of two receipts in the handwriting of, and signed by, Elijah 
Livermore, in the book in which the " Journal of 1772 " was kept. 

Waltham Jan' 19, 1756 
Received of Mr. Daniel Harrington Six pound thirteen Shillings and 
four pence in part of a note Elij Livermore. 

Waltiiam January 19, 1756 
Then received of Nath' Livermore two pound in part of a note that is 
due to Sa" Livermore, Esq. 

received by me Elij Livermore. 



G 

MEMORANDA OF CERTAIN DEEDS. 

Samuel Livermore, Leonard Williams, and Nathaniel Livermore, Com- 
mittee, etc., conveyed to Thomas Fish, cordwainer, of Oxford, in the 
County of Worcester, " one whole right or share in the township granted 
to Samuel Livermore and others June 11, 1771." This deed was dated 
November 11, 1772, and recorded in the Cumberland Registry, Vol. 9, 
p. 22. 

Jonas Ward, of Worcester, releases to Fish Nov. 6, 1773, " one whole 
right or share in township &c I being one of the original grantees in 
said town and the House Lots in the first division of my said I'ight in 
said township being No. 28." (Vol. 13, p. 415.) 

November 24, 1773, Thomas Fish, of Oxford, conveyed to William 
VFai.son, of Oxford (Vol. 10, p. 438), one whole right or share in said 
township. 

August 7, 1780, Josiah Wyer, of Liverton, yeoman, conveyed to 
Thomas Fish, of Liverton, gentleman, 50 acres half of 27th lot in the 
first division. This deed was acknowledged June 19, 1782, and recorded 
Vol. 13, p. 414, Cumberland Registry. 

August 9, 1781, Amasa Allen, of Charlton, Worcester County, con- 
veyed one hundred acres to the townshij?. No. 9, 1st Division. 

April 10, 1781, Asa Uasseltine, of Upton, Worcester County, con- 
veyed to Thomas Fish lots 18 and 8, 1st Division, containing one 
hundred acres each. 

Sept. 16, 1785, Elijah Livermore conveyed to Wm. Bachelor, of Liver- 
ton, 50 acres. 

Oct. 1, 1785, Elijah Livermore conveyed to Daniel Dailey 50 acres, 
part of No. 11, east side of the river. 

Oct. 13, 1785, Same conveyed to Wm. Carver lot 14, west side. 

Oct. 14, 1785, Elijah Livermore conveyed to Pelatiah Gibbs lot 33, west 
side of the river. 



APPENDIX. 



H 



149 



Names of the Representatives to the Great and General Court of 
Massachusetts and to the Legislature of the State of Maine from the 
first one after the organization of the town in 1795 to 1874. 

TO THE GREAT AND GENERAL COURT. 
Date of Election. 

1799 Elijah Livermore. 

1800 Gen. David Learned. 

1801 Gen. David Learned. 

1802 Eev. Sylvanus Boardman. 

1803 Dr. Cyrus Hamlin. 

1804 No record made of any election. 

1805 Voted not to send. 

1806 Capt. Simeon Waters. 

1807 Nathaniel Perley. 

1808 Capt. Simeon Waters. 

1809 Capt. Simeon Waters. 

1810 Capt. Simeon Waters. 

1811 WilUam H. Brettun. 

1812 William H. Brettun and Capt. Simeon Waters. 

1813 William H. Brettun and Samuel Livermore. 

1814 Capt. Simeon Waters and Israel Washhurn. 

1815 Capt. Simeon Waters and Israel Washburn. 

1816 Capt. Simeon Waters and Ira Thompson. 

1817 Voted not to send. 

1818 Capt. Simeon Waters and Israel Washburn. 

1819 Israel Washburn. 

TO THE LEGISLATURE OF MAINE. 

1820 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1821 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1822 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1823 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1824 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1825 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1826 Thomas Chase, Jr. 

1827 Dr. Benjamin Bradford. 

1828 Dr. Benjamin Bradford. 

1829 Dr. Benjamin Bradford. 
11 



150 APPENDIX. 

1830 Charles Barrell. 

1831 Dr. William Snow. 

1832 Keuel Washburn. 

1833 Reuel Washburn. 

1834 Reuel Washburn. 

1835 Reuel Washburn. 

1836 Dr. Benjamin Bradford. 

1837 Samuel B. Holt. 

1838 Samuel B. Holt. 

1839 Dr. Willard Kelsey. 

1840 Dr. Willard Kelsey. 

1841 Reuel Washburn. 

1842 Dr. Samuel B. Morison. 

1843 Isaac S. Daly. 

1844 Dr. Samuel B. Morison. 

1845 Isaac S. Daly. 

1846 Rev. Philip Hunger. 

1847 Dr. Benjamin Bradford.^ 

1848 James Chase. 

1849 Dr. William B. Small. 

1850 Nathaniel Norcross. 

1851 Nathaniel Norcross. 

1852 Held over under the amended constitution. 

1853 Gen. John B. Morrow, of Dixfield.^ 

1854 Elbridge G. Harlow, of Canton. 

1855 Thomas C. Gurney, of Canton. 

1856 Peter Trask, of Mexico. 

1857 Orrison Rollins, of Livermore. 

1858 Calvin Stanley, of Dixfield. 

1859 Thomas C. Gurney, of Canton. 

1860 Sewall M. Norton, of Livermore. 

1861 John Monroe, of Livermore. 

1862 Solon Chase, of Turner.^ 

1863 Solon Chase, of Turner. 

1864 Charles W. Fuller, of Livermore. 

1865 Daniel H. Kilbreth, of Livermore. 



iThis electiou of Dr. Bradford was only made after fifteen different trials. The first voting 
was at the regular State electiou Sept. 14th, resulting in no choice. The town continued vot- 
ing once or twice a month till tlie fifth day of July following, when Dr. B. was finally elected. 
It then required a majm-Uy of all the votes cast to elect. 

2Thi8 year Livermore was classed with Canton, Dixfleld, and Mexico as a representative dis- 
trict. 

8Thi8 year Livermore was classed with Turner as a representative district. 



APPENDIX. 



151 



1866 Philip Bradford, of Turner. 

1867 Philip Bradford, of Turner. 

1868 Albert C. Pray, of Livermore. 

1870 Zebulon H. Bearce, of Turner. 

1871 James Fish, of Turner. 

1872 Rufus Prince, of Turner. 

1873 James A. Caiy, of Turner. 

1874 Caleb Smith, of Livermore. 



LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS 

(with the amounts subscribed) for the support of preaching in the Uni- 
versalist Society in 1807. 



Thomas Bryant $300 

Cornelius Holland 3.00 

Isaac King 1.00 

Samuel Beals 2.00 

Ezra Parker 2.00 

John Wormwell 2.00 

Joseph Horsley 5.00 

Daniel Child 3 00 

Asa Haskell 3.00 

Joseph Mills 3.00 

Henry Sawtelle 3.00 

Ephraim Griff eth 2.00 

William Cooper 2.00 

Hezekiah Bryant 2.00 

Simeon Waters 3.00 

Samuel Atwood 5.00 



David Learned S5.00 

Israel Paul 2.00 

Gideon Southworth 2.00 

John Leavitt 2.00 

John Griff eth, Jr 2.00 

Abel Delano 1.50 

John Griffeth 2.00 

David Morse 2.00 

Isaac Hamlin 1.00 

Rouse H. Leavitt 1.00 

Jonathan Morse 3.00 

John Turner 1.00 

Samuel Benjamin 4.00 

Jonathan Bryant 2.00 

Jesse Stone 2.28 



APPENDIX. 



CATALOGUE OF SCHOLARS 

In Livermorc, made by Benjamin Foster. Mr. Fo.stcr was a popular 
and successful teacher of schools in Livermore from 1806 to 1810 or 
1811. For which of these years the subjoined list was made does not 
appear. 



Allen Eben. 
Abbot Hull. 
Abbot Bill. 
Abbot Elizabeth. 
Abbot Bethiah. 
Abbot Anna. 
Abbot Polly. 
Basford Eeuben. 
Basford Nabby. 
Basford Anna. 
Boardman Sally. 
Boardman George. 
Boardman Hohnes. 
Bond Hannah. 
Bigelow Polly. 
Bigelow Eliza. 
Bigelow Caroline. 
Barton Asa. 
Barton Catherine. 
Barton Sally. 
Barton Eunice. 
Barton Aaron. 
Benjamin William. 
Benjamin Nathaniel- 
Benjamin Betsy. 
Benjamin Patty. 
Benjamin Polly. 
Benjamin David. 
Benjamin Charles, 
Benjamin Elisha. 
Benjamin Euth. 
Basford Ebenezer. 
Basford Joanna. 
Basford Mercy. 



Blanchard James. 
Beals Jennet. 
Beals Olive. 
Britton William. 
Bartlett Cyrus. 
Bartlett Nathan. 
Billings Abijali. 
Billings Munro. 
Commins Sally. 
Commins Lucy. 
Commins Asenath. 
Cooper Sally. 
Cooper Sukey. 
Cooper Polly. 
Chase Betsy. 
Chase Nabby. 
Chase Charles T. 
Chase Lydia. 
Chase Olive. 
Cochran William. 
Cochran Nancy. 
Cochran Stephen. 
Carver Eleazer. 
Child Lewis W. 
Child Joseph. 
Child True. 
Child Elisha. 
Clark William. 
Clark Samuel. 
Clark Mary. 
Chase Munro. 
Chase Sarson. 
Chase Jane. 
Chase Mary. 



APPENDIX. 



153 



Child Manson. 
Child Bloe. 
Clark Lydia. 
Dolbier Polly. 
Dennett Moses. 
Dennett Nabby. 
Delano John. 
Delano Jabez, 
Delano Samuel. 
Edes Phebe. 
Edes Eliza. 
Edes Maria. 
Edes Nabby. 
French Betsy. 
French Sally. 
Fuller Philenia. 
Fuller Hannah. 
Fuller Anna. 
Fuller Betsy. 
Fuller Jesse Lee. 
Fuller Orin. 
Fuller Samuel. 
Foster Asenath. 
Fuller Nabby. 
French Rebecca. 
Fuller Rebecca. 
Fuller Sally. 
Fuller Ruth. 
Gibbs Patty. 
Goding Rhoda. 
Goding Hannah. 
Goding Zebulon. 
Griffin Obed. 
Griffin Hezekiah. 
Griffin Sally. 
Griffin Betsy. 
Hathaway William. 
Hubbard Nathaniel. 
Haskell Hezekiah. 
Haskell Polly. 
Holman Dolly. 
Holnian Samuel. 
Holman Daniel. 
Hathaway Luther. 
Hathaway Patience. 
Hathaway Eben. 
Hersey Mary. 

11* 



Hersey Samuel. 
Hersey Eliza. 
Hersey Isaac. 
Hersey William. 
Hurd Polly. 
Hurd Betsy. 
Hurd John. 
Hurd Hannah. 
Hains Francis. 
Hains J crush a. 
Hains Peter. 
Hains Hannah. 
Hains Henry. 
Hains Henry. 
Hains Rossetta. 
Holmes Clark. 
Hamlin Anna. 
Hamlin Greene. 
Jackson Nancy. 
Judkius Fanny. 
Judkins Asa. 
Judkins Anna. 
Judkins Hannah., 
Judkins Patty. 
Kenny Maria. 
Kimball Jane. 
Kenny Rachel. 
Kenny Elisha. 
Livermore Granville. 
Livermore Hannah. 
Livermore Eliza. 
Livermore Elijah. 
Learned Samuel. 
Learned Charles. 
Learned Maria. 
Lovel Luther. 
Leavitt Myloza. 
Leavitt Sukey. 
Learned Edward. 
Leadbetter Luther. 
Leadbetter Thomas. 
Leadbetter Charles. 
Leadbetter Huldah. 
Mayhew Eliza. 
Mayhew Phebe. 
More Sally. 
Merrill Eunice. 



154 



APPENDIX. 



Merrill Joseph. 
Merrill Silas. 
Merrill Eichard. 
Monroe Sally. 
Monroe Luda. 
Monroe Hannaln. 
Monroe Nathan. 
Monroe Isaac. 
Merrill Salome-. 
Mills Sally. 
Mills Persis. 
Mills Appy. 
Mills Jnlia. 
Mills Lewis. 
Morrison Cybil. 
Norton Sukey. 
Norton Jones. 
Norton Jethro. 
Norton Mary. 
Norton Nabby. 
Norton Ira. 
Norton Patt3^ 
Norton Moses. 
Norton James. 
JTorton Tristram. 
Philbrick Hannah. 
Philbrick Jane. 
Philbrick Eliza. 
Philbrick Betsy. 
Philbrick Charlotte, 
Philbrick Harriet. 
Philbrick Eunice. 
Philbrick Anna. 
Philbrick Thomas. 
Philbrick Stephen. 
Philbrick Maria. 
Pratt Sally. 
Pitts Polly. 
Pitts Anna. 
Pierpont Robert. 
Pierpont George. 
Pierpont Elijah. 
Pratt Lucy. 
Parker Benjamin. 
Parker Jesse. 
Parker Lucy. 
Parker Rupanna. 



Parker Nancy . 
Parker Clarissa. 
Packard Alanson. 
Packard Sylvanus. 
Parker Simon. 
Packard Jerusha. 
Paul Phebe. 
Paul Ellis. 
Paul Olive. 
Rowell Betsy. 
Rowell Bulla. 
Rowell Abijah. 
Reed Lucinda. 
Reed Phillips. 
Rose Zebedee. 
Rose Church. 
Randall Samuel. 
Randall Mary. 
Randall Joshua. 
Randall Asa. 
Stevens Clarissa. 
Stevens Hannah. 
Stevens Nabby. 
Stevens Wealthy. 
Stevens Markwell. 
Stafford Moses. 
Stone Sally. 
Stone William. 
Stacy Dolly. 
Stacy William. 
Stacy Hiram. 
Stacy Sukey. 
Strictland John. 
Strictland Isaac. 
Strictland Hastings. 
Strickland Poily. 
Sawtelle Lavinia. 
Sawtelle Elmira. 
Sawtelle Nathan. 
Sawtelle Joanna. 
Sawtelle Harriet. 
Sawin Patty. 
Sawin Samuel. 
Sawin Rebecca. 
Sawin Daniel. 
Sawin John. 
Sawin Abijah. 



APPENDIX. 



155 



Sawin Polly. 
Thompson Roxanna. 
Turner Nabby. 
Turner Persis. 
Turner Arethusa. 
Winter Olive. 
Wyman Sally. 
Wyman Eliza. 
Wyman Witham. 
Wyman Sukey. 
Wyman Thomas. 
Wing Mary. 
Wing Susanna. 
Wing Daniel. 
Wing William. 
Wing Emory. 
Wing Samuel. 
Wyer Diana. 
Wyer William. 
Wyer Sally. 



Wyer George. 
Woodbury Polly. 
Woodbury Asa. 
AVaters Eliza. 
Warren Aurelia. 
Wing Hannah. 
Washburn Cynthia. 
Washburn Olive. 
Washburn Abner W. 
Wyman Peter. 
Whitman Ereelove. 
Whitman Snow. 
York Gideon. 
York Shadrach. 
York Rachel. 
Young Jacob. 
Young Moses. 
Young Aaron. 
Young William. 



LIVEEMORE SCHOOL, 1810, EAST SIDE. 



Abbot Hall. 
Abbot Bill. 
Abbot Elizabeth. 
Abbot Bethiah. 
Abbot Anna. 
Abbot Polly. 
Abbot Rachel. 
Bomp Zephaniah. 
Benjamin Nathaniel. 
Benjamin Patty. 
Benjamin David. 
Benjamin Polly. 
Benjamin Charles. 
Benjamin Elisha. 
Benjamin Ruth. 
Black William. 
Basford Ebenezer. 
Basford Johanna. 
Basford Mercy. 
Basford Elvira. 
Barton Asa. 
Barton Katherine. 
Barton Sally. 



Barton Eunice. 
Barton Aaron. 
Barton Lavinia. 
Chandler Belinda. 
Chandler Polly. 
Chandler Dudley. 
Clark Oliver. 
Dutton Thomas. 
Eastman Caleb. 
Fuller Philena. 
Puller Hannah. 
Fuller Anna. 
Fuller Betsy. 
Fuller Jesse Lee. 
Fuller Selah. 
Fuller Orin. 
Fuller Samuel. 
Fuller John. 
Foster Asenath. 
Fellows Benjamin. 
Fellows Stephen. 
Hobbs Jonathan. 
Hains Francis. 



156 



APPENDIX. 



ITains Jerusha. 
Hains Hannah. 
Hains Peter. 
Hains Henry. 
Hains Arabella. 
Hains Harvey. 
Hains Rosella. 
Judkins Lavinia. 
Judkins Asa. 
Judkins Hannah. 
Judkins Polly. 
Judkins Anna. 
Judkins Lucy. 
Leadbetter Thomas. 
Leadbetter Charles. 
Leadbetter Huldah. 
Leadbetter Benjamin. 
Morrill Elijah. 



Morrison Cybil. 
Morrison Euth. 
Pillsbury Eben. 
Randall Samuel. 
Randall Joshua. 
Randall Asa. 
Swift Sally. 
Whitaker Stuart. 
Washburn Cynthia. 
"Washburn A. Waterman. 
Wyman Daniel. 
York Rachel. 
York Gideon. 
York Shadrach. 
Young Aaron. 
Young William. 
Young Joshua. 



The spelling of the names, though not in all cases according to the 
usage of the parties themselves, stands as written by Mr. Foster. 



K 



AMERICAN ANCESTORS OF CAPT. DAVID HINKLEY, THE CENTENARIAN. 

Samuel Hinkley and wife, Sarah, with four children came, in 1634, 
from Tenterden, Kent, England, in ship "Hercules;" settled at Scitu- 
ate with his pastor. Rev. Mr. Lothrop. Finally settled in Barnstable, 
1638-9; was father of Thomas, w^ho w^as Governor of New Plymouth 
eleven years to the time when that colony was united with Massachu- 
setts. 

Thomas — married Mary Richards and Mary Glover. 

Samuel — " Sarah Pope. 

Samuel — " Mary Freeman. 

Shubael*— " Mary Smith. 

Thomas — " Deborah Mitchell, Mary Taylor. 

David, born in Georgetown January 8, 1766. 



*Shubael, the grandfather of David, moved from Cape Cod and settled in Georgetown, Me. 
His wife was a native of York, Me. 



APPENDIX. 



157 



By the favor of Z. K, Harmon, Esq., of Portland, the following lists 
of officers and soldiers of the militia from Livermore, who wont to the 
defence of that town in the war of 1812, are given. 

In the war of 1812-14, when the State militia were called out for de- 
fence of the sea-coast towns, two companies were called out from this 
town and marched to Portland for the defence of that place. These 
companies were commanded by Capts. Elias Morse and William Mor- 
ison and were attached to Lieut. Col. Samuel Holland's regiment. A 
copy of Col. Holland's staff roll is given below; those marked with a * 
were from Livermore: 



Samuel xlolland, Lieut. Col. 

Moses Stone, Ilajor. 
*.Toshua Soule,t Chaphdn. 
* James Chase, Adjutant. 
*Henry "Wood, Quartermaster. 



*John Briggs, Paymaster. 
Cornelius Holland, Surgeon. 
Ebenezer Ellis, Sergeant Major. 
Daniel Austin, Quartermaster Seryt. 
John Hearsej', Drum Major. 



When the militia had been in the service at Portland about two weeks, 
not much prospect for a light appearing, the three Oxford County regi- 
ments were consolidated into one, which regiment was commanded by 
Col. William Rj'erson and continued in service from Sept. 25, to N'ov. 5, 
1811. The following are the Livermore men who served under Col. 
Holland 14th to 24th Sept., and also under Col. Eyerson 25th Sept., to 
5th Nov., 1814. 



CAPTAIN morse's COMPANY. 



Elias Morse, Captain. 
Henry Aldrich, Ensign. 
Nathaniel Soper, Sergeant. 
Thomas Haskell, " 
Daniel Child, " 

Hardwick, " 

John Fisher, Corporal. 
John Hayes, " 
John Griffith, 
Bradish Turner, " 
Xezer Bailey, Musician. 
Seth Ballon, " 



Privates. 
Samuel Ames. 
Lucius Andrews. 
Lescom Andrews. 
John Blgelow. 
Samuel Beals. 
lAither Beals. 
Samuel Boothb3^ 
Thomas Bryant. 
Simeon Brown. 
George Chandler, 
Joshua Campbell. 



t Afterwards Bishop Soule. 



158 



APPENDIX, 



Didymus Edgecomb. 
Warren Dailey. 
Daniel Edgecomb. 
Joseph Eoss. 
Elijah Fisher. 
Grinfill Fisher. 
Seth Foster. 
Samuel Fuller. 
Daniel Graflfam. 
Eli Hathaway. 
Josiah Hobbs. 
Joseph Jackson. 
Stephen Jones. 
Oris Morse. 



Luther Lovewell. 
David Morse, Jr. 
Jonathan Mei'rill. 
Simeon Putnam. 
Paul Kobinson. 
David Rich. 
John Strickland. 
Daniel Safford. 
John Safford. 
Gad Soper. 
Alexander Soper. 
William Saunders. 
Abijah Sawin, Jr. 
James Starbird. 



The following were Livermore soldiers who served after the draft 
from Sept. 25, to Nov. 5, 1814. 



Elias Morse, Captain. 
Henry Aldrich, Ensign. 
John Griffith, Corporal. 

Privates. 
Lucius Andrews. 
Luther Beals. 
Simeon Brown. 
Elijah Fisher. 
Daniel Edsiecomb. 



Daniel Graffam. 
Eli Hathaway. 
Joseph Jackson. 
Luther Lovewell. 
David Morse, Jr. 
David Rich. 
James Starbird. 
Alexander Soper. 



CAPTAIN MORTSON'S COMPANY. 



William Morison, Captain. 
Thomas Davis, Lieutenant. 
Billy Benjamin, Ensign. 
Alden Wellington, Sergeant. 
Martin Farrington, " 
Obed Wing, 

Timothy Eastman, " 
Francis F. Haynes, Musician. 
Daniel Dolley, " 

John Clark, Corporal. 

Samuel Randall, " 

Nehemiah Knowles, " 
Jacob Lovejoy, " 



Privates. 
Datus T. Allen. 
Ebenezer Burgess. 
Charles Benjamin. 
David Bartlett. 
Samiiel Burgess. 
Amos Carver. 
Samuel Dunn. 
Stephen Dutton. 
Benjamin Farrington. 
Abraham Fuller. 
Stephen Freeman. 
John Hodgdon. 



APPENDIX. 



169 



Samuel C. Hodgdon. 
Abraham Hodgdon. 
Paul Hammond. 
Amos Hobbs. 
Thomas Leadbetter. 
Oliver S. Lyford. 
Samuel Lyford. 
Joseph Lyford. 
Jonathan Libby. 
Joseph Morrill. 
Elijah Morrill. 
Jeremiah Knox. 
Simeon Norris. 
William Norris. 



Samuel Norris. 
Moses Page. 
Edmund Phillips. 
Nace Smith. 
William Smith. 
William Stinchfield. 
Ebenezer Tanner. 
John A¥yman. 
Elijah Wellington. 
Adam Wilbur. 
Lewis White. 
Geo. Walker. 
Moses Young. 
Moses Young, Jr. 



The following were Livermore soldiers who served after the draft 
from Sept. 25, to :Nov. 5, 1814. 



William Morison, Captain. 
Thomas Davis, Lieutenant. 
Alden Wellington, Sergeant. 
John Clark, Corporal. 

Jacob Lovejoy, " 
Erancis F. Haynes, Musician. 

Privates. 
Datus T. Allen. 
David Bartlett. 
Ebenezer Burjjess. 



Amos Carver. 
Didymus C. Edgecomb. 
Abraham Fuller. 
Abraham Hodgdon. 
Thomas Leadbetter. 
Samuel Lyford. 
Joseph Morrill. 
Elijah Morrill. 
Edmund Phillips. 
Elijah Wellington. 
Moses Young, Jr. 



There were a large number of Livermore men who enlisted into the 
United States army for one year and during the war, and served in the 
34th and 45th Regiments of Infantry, whose names cannot now be ob- 
tained to insert in this work. 



16()l APPENDIX. 



M 



NAMES OF SOLDIERS FHOM LIVERMORE IN THE WAR OF THE RE- 
BELLION. 

First Cavalry. 

1 Doble William, Oct 31, 1861. 

2 Hutcliins Joseph R, " " " 

3 Kussell Alonzo P., " " " 

4 Ricker Milton F., Dec. 10, 1863. 

5 Ripley Henry W., " " " Died at New Orleans July 1st. 

6 Atwood James K, " 22, " 

7 Dunn Daniel D., " 24, " 

Infantry, 1st Regiment. 

8 Fuller George H., July 28, 1863. 

9 Hodgdon George F., Jan. 23, 1864. Wounded in action . 

Sd Tiegiment. 

10 Harris Charles, July 16, 1861. 

4i/i Regiment. 

11 Brown William L., Aug. 20, 1863. 

12 Dyer Adoniram L., July 24, 1863. Died at Brandy Station. 

Sth Regiment. 

13 Strickland Lee Col, Sept. 7, 1861. Resigned Dec. 13, 1861. 

14 Jones Eben M., Feb. 29, 1862. 

1.5 Monroe Chas. F., Sept. 7, 1861. Wounded June 3, died June 6. 

16 Shurtleff Sylvan G., June 1, 1864. Promoted Lieutenant. 

17 Kilbreth Leander L., " 4, " " Sergeant. 

18 Goding Emulous L., Sept. 7, 1861. 

19 Mitchell George W., Jan. 1, 1864. Promoted Sergeant. 

20 Ricker Wesley, Sept. 7, 1861. 

21 Wyer Charles L., Jan. 1, 1864. Wounded in battle Aug. 17th. 

22 Ross Daniel W., " " " 

23 Beckler William, July 29, 1863. 

24 Niles Timothy B. 

25 Strickland Aug. XL, Q. M., Sept. 9, 1861. Resigned Apr. 29, 1862. 

26 Timberlake W. 11., 2d Lieut., Sept. 7, 1861. Res. Dec. 31, 1861. 

27 Waterman Louis A., 2d Lieut., Jan. 23, 1865. Dis. Jan. 18, 1866. 

28 Ridley Jonathan, Feb. 29, 1864. Promoted Corporal. 

29 Stevens LeRoy, Sept. 7, 1861. Killed at Gettysburg. 

30 Quinby Edwin F., Sept. 7, 1861. Died at Port Royal 1862. 



APPENDIX. 161 

9th Regiment. 

31 Harvard Stillman, Sept. 23, 1864. 

32 Sweetser Fred. B., " 24, " 

10th Regiment. 

33 Putnam John A., Aug. 14, 18(54. 

12th Regiment. 

34 Childs Henry O., Feb. 7, 1865. 

14i/i Regiment. 

35 Morse Eliphalet C, Jan. 1, 1864. Killed in battle. 

lath Regiment. 

36 Brown Benjamin F., Dee. 20, 1861. 

37 Pearson Edward, Jan. 25, 1864. 

IQth Regiment. 

38 Smith James C, Oct. 3, 1861. 

39 Allen Jonathan, July 31, 1863. 

40 Bartlett J^athan, Jr., Aug. 14, 1862. Died in Libby Prison. 

41 Allen Charles W., " 20, " 

19th Regiment. 

42 Campbell Augustus, Aug. 18, 1863. 

^Oth Regiment. 

43 Pray A. C, Sergeant Major, Aug. 29, 1862. 

44 Morrill William W., Aug. 9, 1862. Killed in battle May 8th. 

45 Thompson A^d, Aug. 29, 1862. Promoted Lieutenant. 

46 Neal George D., " " " 

47 Brown Edward K., " " " 

48 Drake Elisha O., " " " 

49 Pratt Sereah M., " " " 

50 Smith Seba, " " " 

51 Williams Philip, Jr.," " " 

23(? Regiment. 

52 Nash James T., Captain, Oct. 17, 1862. 

29th Regiment. 

53 Leavitt Volney, Sept. 16, 1864. Killed in battle. 
64 Childs Marshall W., " " " Wounded. 

55 Ellis Charles P., " " " 

66 Nash Leonard F., " " " Wounded and died. 
57 Wyman Henry A., Dec. 12, 1863. 
12 



162 



APPENDIX. 



58 
59 
60 
61 
62 
()3 
64 
65 
66 
67 
68 
69 
70 
71 
72 
73 

74 
75 

76 
77 
78 
79 
80 
81 
82 
83 
84 

85 
86 
87 
88 
89 
90 
91 



92 

93 
94 



30th Regiment. 
Barrows Cyrus M., Sergeant, Dec. 15, 186.'3. 
Robins George W., " '* " " 

Goding William H. IT., Dec. 15, 1863. 
Harrington Charles H., *•' " " 
Brown Francis S., " " " 

Fuller Isaac D., ct u u 

Keith Charles W., 
Merrill Roscoe F., 
Moore William S., 
Norton Alden L., 
Rollins George F., 
Viniug Llewellyn C, 
Casey John, 
Coolidge George H., 
Fernald Philemon H., 
Roberts Frank, 



Promoted Corporal. 



28, 



15, 



Died in prison. 



iMst Regiment. 
March 10, 1864. 

, " 23, " 



Battles Caleb, 
Beckier John W. 
Morse Loren W., " " " 
Morse Elias A., " " " 

Norton Hebron, " " " 
Pratt Thomas M., •' 11, " 
Edgecomb Alonzo D., April 2, 1864. 
Merrill Henry R., " " " 

Taylor Israel C, " " " 



Winslow Gilbert, 
Rose George V., 



" " " Wounded. 
■' 16, " 



32fZ Regiment. 
March 23, 1864. 



Killed on picket. 



Cole Charles E., 

Rose Henry B., 

Atwood Charles H., " " " 

Morse Charles, " " " 

Gibbs Charles, April 2, 1864. Wounded. 

Bigelow John W., " " " 

Irving Samuel P., April 14, 1865. 

Fourth Battery. 
Goding Martin, Dec. 19, 1864. 

First Veterans. 
Emery Ira, March 1, 1864. 
Fuller George H., July 28, 1864. 



APPENDIX. 163 



N. 



ADDITIONS, CORRECTIONS, ERRATA. 

Dea. Elijah Livermore married (1st) Dinah Harrington, bap. May 20, 
1733; she died Sept. 30, 1759: and he married (2d) April 6,1762, Hannah 
Clarke, b. in Newton, January 14, 1740, dan. of Capt. eTohn Clarke; she 
died March 17, 1827. 

In the list of '' heads of families " in 1789, given on page 9, the name 
of " Graves " appears. Henry Grevy, the Hessian soldier, is undoubtedly 
the person there referred to. 

Accounts in reference to Major Fish's last visit to Winthrop are con- 
flicting. Mr. Chase (p. 106) says he had been to Winthrop a few weeks, 
working as a shoemaker, and paying attentions to the young woman who 
was soon to be his wife. 

While it will be entirely safe to depend upon Mr. Chase in respect to 
the circumstances of the death of the Major, and to all matters that 
transpired at Livermore, it is highly probable that the Winthrop ac- 
counts, relating to his departure on his return to Livermore, are correct. 
These accounts are to the following effect: 

Mr. Z. A. Marrow, of Winthrop, understood to be a relative of Miss 
Betsey Marrow, the affianced of Maj. Fish, writes — 

"He" Major Fish, " left the house of Mr. Nathaniel Fairbanks, of 
Pond-town, now Winthrop, with two sides of leather, about three o'clock 
in the afternoon for Port Royal, now Livermore. There were no roads 
at that time and only spotted trees for a guide. It is said that he per- 
ished near the Androscoggin River, within one mile of his home." 

C. Fairbanks, of Winthrop, writes the Lewiston Journal, April, 1874 — • 

" My father, Nathaniel Fairbanks, was one of the lirst settlers of Win- 
throp. He built a tannery two miles east of Winthrop village in 1778, 
the first tannery, I think, in Kennebec County. There was no road from 
Winthrop village except a spotted line, as it was called, from Winthrop 
to Livermore. Major Thomas Fish came to my father's house from Liv- 
ermore in those days for half a side each of sole and upper leather. He 
arrived at 3 P. M. The snow was knee-deep and the weather cold. It 
was in January, I think, between the years 1781 and 1783. Major Fish 
was asked to remain all night, but declined, saying he must return home 
that night. He left for Livermore, but perished of cold and fatigue, 
when near his home." 

Betsey Marrow, to whom Major Fish was engaged to be maiTied, be- 
came the wife of Jonas Stevens, of Winthrop, where she lived and died. 

The wife of Major Fish was Naomi Mixer, of Sutton,. Worcester 



164 APPENDIX. 

County, Mass. The records of Oxford, in the same count}^ where Major 
Fish resided, show the following entries: 

" Thomas Fish, of Oxford, and Naomi Mixter, of Sutton, were married 
in Oxford, the 25th day of June, A. D. 1767, hy the Kev. Joseph Bow- 
man." 

" Kuth, daughter of Thomas Fish and Naomi his wife, was born the 
5th day of December, A. d. 1768." It is understood that there were two 
children of this marriage, but the Oxford records indicate that one only 
was born in that town. 

It will be remembered that Major Fish in his journal speaks of " fa- 
ther Mixer," who was with him in 1773. Previous to the return of the 
Major to Livermore in 1780-81, Mrs. Fish had died. 

Nathan Wellington, of East Livermore, who has been dead sev- 
eral years, owned the farm on which his father, Lieut. Elijah Wellington, 
settled. The farm is still in possession of the family. 

Hartavell Baker, John, Robert, and Hanson Hayes, were 
among the early farmers in the center of the town. 

Francis Morrill was a blacksmith, whose shop was at Fuller's Mills, 
near half a century ago. lie became a Methodist clergyman. 

Joshua Campbell, from Raynham, planted himself on the liver 
above the Turner line, about 1800. 

Isaac Fuller, whose farm was on the southerly slope of Fuller's 
hill, so called, in the westerly part of the town, moved from Kingston, 
Mass., a great many years ago. His children were Asa, Ira, Woodman, 
Rebecca, Ruth, Sarah, and Lura. Ira resides in Phillips, Me. Wood- 
man, and Lura, who married S. W. Phillips, live in this town. The 
others are dead. 

Joseph, and his sons, Richard, Benjamin, and Jonathan, 
Merrill were farmers on the west side of the river. The name is still 
represented in town. The late Ambrose Merrill, of Hallowell, was a 
son of the last-named. 

George O. Chickering lives on the south road, whither he removed 
some years ago from the west part of the town. He had a brother, Zach- 
ariah, who has been dead many years. Mr. Chickering is believed to be 
the oldest man now residing in Livermore, being 93 years old. 

Col. Wm. Morison and his brothers, Robert and James, moved 
to the east side early in the century. The first two settled in Sebec 
about fifty years ago, but James remained in East Livermore, where his 
sons, Cyrus and Haines L., reside. He died October 18, 1867, aged 86^ 
years. 

West Robinson had a farm under Fuller's hill, on the east side. He 



APPENDIX. 165 

died about 1846. His children were Cyrus, Clarinda, Olive, West, 
Chandler, Hannah, and Albion. 

Perez Howard, whose home was on the northerly side of Lovewell's 
hill, next to the farm now owned by Abijah Childs, was a native of 
Bridgewater, Mass. His children were Perez (who was a teacher in 
Carlisle, Pa.), Charles, Stillmau, and Leonard. Charles and Leonard 
went to Piscataquis county. 

Amos Perley settled in the West Kobinson neighborhood, and after- 
wards moved to Canton, where he died. He was from Winthrop. His 
children were Zenas, Mary Ann (who married Allen Monroe), Martha 
Drew, and Sarah Smith. 

Asa Francis, whose residence was midway from Sanders corner to 
the village, was from Minot, Me. His children were Olive (who married 
A, B. Barton, Esq., of Minneapolis, Minn.), Lewis, and Benjamin and 
David, twins. He died about 1865. 

James Horsley was a neighbor to Mr. Fi-ancis. He migrated from 
New Hampshire over seventy years ago, and died in Livermore in 1845. 
His children were Eliza, Caroline (both of whom were married and left 
town), and John, an inhabitant of Dixfield. 

Lieut. Israel Paul's farm was on the eastemi bank of Brettun's 

Pond. He was from Berkeley, Mass., and settled in Livermore about 
three-quarters of a century ago. He had two sons, John and Barzillai, 
both of whom are dead. Of the daughters who grew up, one married 

John Sanders, one James Horsley, one Quinby, of Turner, and 

one Thomas Coolidge; the last two are now living. 

Medad and II^athan Sawtelle were farmers in town. Medad 
moved to Quincy, 111., a long time ago. Kathan settled in Livermore, 
where he died Oct. 27, 1872. 

Benjamin, Daniel, and Didymus Ebgecomb were from the county 
of York. They settled near the center of the town, in the Meserve neigh- 
borhood. Joseph Meserve, a native of Falmouth, Me., was a farmer. 
He had four children, — Mary, who married Stearns Gibbs; Joseph M., 
who married Martha Coolidge, was a lawyer of great promise, and died 
young, in Augusta, some eight or ten yeai's ago; and Maria and Abby, 
both of whom are dead. 

Eben Keith came from Raynham to Livermore towards the close of 
the last century, and was a farmer. His son, Martin Keith, has a good 
farm on the road from South Livermore to Strickland's ferry. 

Page 9. Jonathan, not Josiah, Norcross was the father of the first 
male child born in Livermore. Jonathan Norcross married, April 15, 
1760, Martha Springer. They were from Georgetown, Me. 



166 APPENDIX. , 

Page 21. In the last two lines of this page, read " Cutting Clarke was 
a brother of Hannah Clarke, Dea. Livermore's second wife." 

Page 32. Line 13, for " in the former town," read " in Livermore." 

Page 35. It was Nathan, and not Isaac ^ Monroe, who was drowned in 
Bartlett's pond. 

Page 36. In the notice of Major Joseph Mills, Hiram Briggs should 
take the place of Daniel Briggs. 

Page 39. In notice of Henry Grevy substitute "resided" for ''lived." 

Page 41. Line 23 should read " placing in the boy's hand a silver 
coin," etc. 
Page 44. Por " mill," in 9th line, read " fulling mill." 

Page 45. Line 15, read '• who possessed something of the humor of 
'Artemus Wai'd.' " 

Page 46. In the next to the last line, read " it " for " this profession." 
Page 50. It was Hiram A. Pitts who married Lenora Horsley. 

Page 51. Bead " There were a fulling mill and carding machine at the 
falls from an early day." 

Page 55. In 22d line strike out the word " alone." 

Page 64. 3d line, for " Watertown " read " Waltham." 

Page 149. From 1820 the figures indicate the years of " service," and 
not of " election," of the Bepresentatives. 



Representative elected in 1867 was S. G. Shurtleff, and not Pliilip Bradford. 
John Sanders was a member of the 23d Resiment. 



INDEX. 



Androscoggin River. . . 90 

Androscoggin Railroad 91 

Alma iVIater, my 96 

Additions 103 

Aldrich, Heui-y 73, 103 

Family of 50 

Allen, Elizabeth Akers.28, 118 

Ames, Samuel 21 

Atwood, Samuel 03, 72 

Family of 35 

Atwood, Rev. Hezekiah.. . 70 

Baptists 64,65,69 

Broad Chiu-ch 84 

Bridges 90 

Blacksmiths - 46 

Ballad— Thomas Fish 118 

Badcock, George 6, 126 

Badlew, 9 

Bailey, Rev. S. B 71 

Baker, Hartwell 164 

Ballon, Seth 50, 103 

Barton, Asa 28 

Barton, Aaron 72 

Barnes, Rev. Thomas. . .65, 72 

Barrel!, Charles 28, 69 

Barnard, Ur 85 

Baker, Charles J 42, 72 

Baker, Hartwell 164 

Bartlett, Asa 104 

Family of 39 

Bartlett, Nathan 47 

Bates, Rev. Greorge 

39, 59, 60, 73, 74 

Beals, Samuel 42 

Bemis, Jacob 14, 39 

Bean, Jeremiah 47 

Belcher, Richard 77 

Benjamin, Sam'l. .9, 18; 43, 67 

Family of 20 

Benjamin, Billy 37, 63 

Benjamin, Samuel 21 

Benjamin, Charles 28 

Benjamin, Nathaniel 28 

Benjamin, David 21 

Benjamin, Elisha 21 

Bennett, William H 75 

Bigelow,John — f.amily. . . . 39 

Blacker, Rev. Robert 75 

Boardman, Rev. Sylvanus. 

9, 35, 60, 66, 68, 80 
Boardman, Rev. Geo. Dana 69 

Bond, Henry 30, 66, 67, 69 

Bond, Dr. Heni-y. . . .11, 31, 65 

Boothby, Ichabo'd 42 

Boothby, Samuel 45, 49 

Bradford, Dr. Benjamin . . 

11, 73, 88, 103 

Family of 82 

Bradford, Henry B 29, 82 

Bradford, Rev. Lucius 68 

Brettuu, Wm. H., 44, 73, 86, 87 

Family of 51 

Briggs, Daniel 41, 73, 74, 75 



Briggs, Hiram 41, 49 

Bridgham, Dr. J. W 85 

Bryant, Thomas 42 

Bryant, Hezekiah 42 

Carpenters 44 

Cabinet makers 49 

Carriage & Sleigh Makers . 49 

Clock Maker 50 

Clothiers and Carders .50 

County Road 58 

Church, Baptist 64, 65, 66 

Church, 2d Baptist 69 

Church, (E. L.) 70 

Church , Free 70 

Chui-ch, Methodi.<t. . .64, 55, 70 
Church, Universalist.64, 65, 72 

Church, Union 75 

Congi-egationalists 64, 65 

Centenarians 89 

Changes 91 

Casualties 109 

Contributions 96 

"Cider Pots" 115 

Corrections 163 

Carver, Mrs 7 

Carver, William 17 

Gary, Dr. William 85 

Catlin, (irove 79 

Chase, Thomas 9, 45, 49, 60 

With Paul Jones 25 

Family of 27 

Chiise, Thomas, jr. .27, 72, 114 

Chase, Thomas, .id 28 

Chase, Tristram, and fam- 
ily 28,111 

Chase, Sarsou, and family. 

48,69 

Chase, Mayhew 36, 69 

Chase, James 69 

Chase, Job 88 

Chase, " Post," 88 

Chase, Sarson, jr ; 49 

Chickering, George O 164 

Chickering, Zachariah 97 

Chenery, William 44 

Cliandler, George . .40, 69, 104 
Child, Ephraim— family.. . 35 

Clarke, Cutting 9, 21 

Clark, Daniel 61 

Collin, Rev. Paul 

14, 24, 34, 37, 46, 55 

Coffin, Naphtah .40, 111 

Coolidge, Thomas — family. 31 

Coolidge, Joseph 32 

Coolidge, William 33 

Coolidge, Daniel 73 

Coolidge, Jefferson 54 

Coolidge, Merritt 54 

Coolidge, Elisha 82 

Cutts, William 50 

Campbell, Joshua 164 

Dedication 74 



Doctors 79 

Dancing Schools 102 

Doctor, cipseudo 116 

Deeds, mem. of certain. . . .148 
Dailey, Nathaniel. . . .9, 22, 43 

Dailey, Daniel 22 

Dailey, Nezer 22, 44 

Dailey, Warren 22 

Delano, James 9, 22, 67 

Delano, Jabez 105, 107, 108 

Family of 22 

Delano, Grace 67 

Delano, Zebedee 66, 67 

Family of 22 

Delano, Ebenezer — family. 22 

Drowne, Dr. William 85 

Dunham, Dr. I. C 85 

East Livermore (incor- 
porated) 57 

East Livermore (Union 

Church) 75 

Early Histoiy 5 

Early Settlers and their 

families 15 

Ecclesiastical matters 64 

Entries in Major Fish's 

journal 142,143 

Errata 163 

Edes, Solomon 42 

Elliot, John 42 

EUiot, Palmer 54, 75 

Ellis, Perez 42, 66 

Evans, William A 79 

Edgcomb, Benjamin 165 

Edgcomb, Daniel 165 

Edgcomb, Didymus 165 

Ferries 90, 106 

Free Masons 86 

Farm Products 92 

Fourth of July Celebration 59 

Facetia; 112 

Fernald, Samuel :>>i 

Fernald, Lysander 44 

Fish, Thos.7, 8, 104, 118, 132, 1(>3 

Fish, Rev. E. S 68 

Fislier, Elijah, 9— family. . 23 

Fisher, Stephen 109 

Foster, Samnel 35 

Foster, Rev. Frederic 75 

Frye, Dr. A. L 85 

Fuller, Abram 38 

Fuller, Isaac 38 

Fuller, John 38, 44, 50 

Fuller, Isaac, 2d 42, 164 

Francis, Asa 165 

Gore, Chandler's 58 

Grant, Petition for 125 

Gibbs, Pelatiah 9, 67, 69 

Family of 23 

Gibbs, Jacob 43 

Gibbs, Phineas 62 



168 



INDEX, 



Goding, Jonathan— family 33 

Goding, Peter 67 

Goding, Spencer 00 

Goding, Roseoe 88 

Grevy , Henry, 9 (as Graves) 3(5 
Gritfitli, Jolin 74 

HAMLIN, Db. Cvrus 

58, 60, 61, 69, 79 

Family of 81 

Hamlin, Elijah L 11, 81 

Hamlin. Isaac 42 

Hamlin, Hannibal 59, 81 

Hamlin, Anna 105, 107 

Haines, Feter 61 

Family of 38 

Haines, Francis F 44 

Family of 5o 

Haynes, Rev. John 68, 69 

Haynes, Nathaniel 69, 97 

Haynes, Isaac C 69 

Hall, Kilah 50 

Hall, Amasa 50 

Haskell, Job 17,55 

Haskell, Isaac 48 

Harmon, Samuel 49 

Hayes, John 72, 164 

Hayes, Robert 72, 164 

Hayes, Hanson 164 

Harrington, Elisha 9 

Hastings, Edward 9 

Hathaway, John 29 

Hathaway, Gilbert 108 

Hersey, Samuel— family.. . 45 

Hersey , Simeon 54 

Hewett, Rufus 42 

Uillman, Rev. Samuel . . . 

9, 60, 66, 71, (2 

Familv of 29 

Hillman, Moses 29 

Hillman, Tristram 29 

Hinds, Ebenezer, jr 73 

Family of •IS 

Hinkley, David 89, 156 

Holman, Daniel 9, 37, 67 

Holman, Abuer 37, 45, 73 

Holman, Samuel P 45, 74 

Hobbs, Josiah ;il 

Howard, Simeon 38, 72 

Howard, Charles 48 

Howard, John 113 

Howard, Perez 165 

Horsley, Joseph 44 

Family of "^^ 

Horsley, Christopher C. 50, 102 

Horsley, James 165 

Holt, Samuel B 54 

Holland, Dr. Cornelius. . . . 

72, 82, 87, 88, 103 

Howe, Dr. Timothy 55, 84 

Howe, Tlmo. 55, 85 

Kurd, William 25 

Humphrey, Peter 46 

Humphrey, John 46, 100 

Hunton, jona. G 58, 76 

Hunton, Lewis 9^^ 

Indians, Roccomkco. .8, 114 

Indian Judgment 8 

Indian Language 114 

Incorporation 9 

Industrial Interests— Busi- 
iit^j^s, 43 



Journal— to Androscoggin 

River 131 

Journal of Thomas Fish.. . 132 
.Journal of Fish's 2d Visit. 139 

Jones, Apollos 45 

Johnson, Kev. O. H 75 

Johnson, James 87 



"Killing the Calf". 100 
Kendall, Alpheus.. .47, 84, 104 

Kendall, Stedman 47, 101 

Keith, Isaiah 45 

Keith, Ebenezer 109, 165 

Keith, Martin 165 

Kingman, Ezra 76 

King, Asa 77 

Kincaid, Alexander 88 

Kidder, Jesse 39, 69, 104 

Kidder, Sarah 90 

Knox, Stacy HO 

Knox, Daniel HO 

LivERMOBE, Samuel — 

0, 15, 126, 127 
Livermore, Samuel (son). . 

11,15 

Livermore, Elijah, 6, 10, 11, 15 

04, 65, 70, 105, 113, 163 

Family of 16 

Livermore, Arthur 15 

Livermore, Edward St. Loe 15 

Livermore, Nathaniel 7 

Livermore, Amos 37 

Livermore, Jason 68 

Livermore, Samuel (son of 

Elijah) 107 

Livermore, Isaac 60, 61, 87 

Livermore, William 1U8 

Lindsay, William 9 

Lovewell, Isaac 

9, 30, 67, 68, 112 

Lovejoy, Jonathan 21 

Lord, Thomas 49 

Low, Rev. Robert 70 

Ladd, Dr. John 85 

Leavitt, Johix 93,104 

Lee, Rev. Jesse 64, 7i 

Learned, Ebenezer 6, 24 

Learned, David 

9, 44, 58, 60, 61, 80 

Family of 24 

Learned, Haines 24, 60 

i.,eonard, Artemas 32, 51 

Location of Grant 127 

Lawyers 76 

Lewiston, City of 58 

Library, Social 83, 108 

Livermore, East 10 

Methodist.? 64, 65, 70 

Meeting Houses 8 

Masons 46 

Masons, Free 86 

Mills 43,44 

Millwi-ights 49 

Ministerial 65, 88 

Mail Carriers 88 

Marketings— Old Time.. 92, 93 

Militia 62, 63 

Municipal Affairs 60 

Memorandum — Oxford to 

Port Royal 140 

Minutes of Swamps and 

Roads 141 

Martin, Wm. Godfrey 117 

Merrill, Joseph 164 

Merrill, Richard 37, 164 

Merrill, Jonathan & Ben- 
jamin 164 

Mills, Joseph 36 

Miller, Rev. Charles 40, 68 

Milner, Rev. R 68 

Millet, Dr. Charles 85 

Monk, Jolm !1 

Morse, David. .9, 44, 46, 61, 72 

Morse, Jonathan 46, 109 

Morse, Elias 44 

Morse, Silas 75 

Morse, Sumner 75 

Morse, Richard 75 



Monroe, Abijah 9— Inn 

33, 60, 61 
Monroe, John, and family 

34, 72, 103 
Monroe, Abel, and family 

34, 72, 103, 113 
Monroe, John, jr.. ..... . . . 

40, 98, 99, 101 

Monroe, Jane 96 

Monroe, Nathan 110 

Morrill, Francis 164 

Meserve, Joseph & J. M. .165 

Morison, Samuel 21 

Family of 54,103 

Morison, Dr. S. B 85 

Morison, WiUiam 164 

Morison, Robert 164 

Morison, James 164 

NOELANDS 59 

jjotes- by Thomas Chase.. 

104, 109 

Nelson, Lot P 54 

Norton, Sylvester 28, 48 

Norton, Ransom . .9, 66, 67, 69 

Family of 28 

Norton, Zebulon, and fam- 
ilv ^^ 

Norton, James 9, 66 

Family of 29 

Norcross, Josiah 9, 165 

Norcross, Jonathan 165 

Nutter, Rev. David 68, 69 

Oxford County 58 

Officers of Militia 62, 63 

Oriental Star Lodgt 86 

Outlook 94 

Physicians 79 

Political Notes 57 

Proprietors, Original 128 

Proprietors. Extracts from 

Records of 146 

Paupers ••• 6- 

Population 55, 5b 

Post-offices and Post-mas- 

Park, Benjamin 35 

Parker, Rev. Carleton 68 

Parker, James 43 

Parker, Alfred 45 

Perley, Nathaniel, 61 

Family of 38 

Perley, Amos 165 

Pendleton, Rev. A. B 68 

Petti ngill, Elisha 54 

Phillips, S. & S 75 

Philoon, James, and fam- 
ily 40, 103 

Pierpont, Robert, and fam- 
ily 16 

Pierpont, George "W... .16, 40 
Pitts, Ebenezer, and fam- ■ 

ily 36 

Piper, G. T 88 

Poole, William 48 

Pollard, William (5 

Paul, Isr.ael ■/•••J^.? 

Pray, Otis.. .49, 73, 74, 84, 102 

Prav, Ephraim.. 49 

Pray, Publius R. R 25, 49 

Pray, Ebenezer 47 

Pray, Alberto •■ 49 

Prescott, Dr. Benj 82, 88 

Putnam, James H 47 

Putnam, Eli 43 

Pumpelly, Samuel 41 

QuisBY, Rev. Geo. W.. . 74 

ROAD 8 

Railroads ^^ 



INDEX. 



169 



Roccomeco 13 

Religious and Ecclesiasti- 
cal Notes 64 

Representatives to the 

Legislature 149 

Reminiscences 96 

Randall 9 

Reed, David 36, 46, 67 

Rich, Thomas 39, 43 

Rich, David 39 

Rollins, Orison 75 

Root, Rev. Isaac 65, 72, 87 

Robinson, Otis. .9,43, 46, 66, 67 

Robinson, West 164 

Rose. Zebedee, and family 45 

Rowell 112 

Russell, Tlieodore 44 

Separation 10, 51 

Soil and Products 13 

School Fund 88 

Schools— Old Time 96 

Sliy 70 

Saddler 48 

Shoemakers 48 

Scythe and Sneath makers 50 
Scholars, Catalogue of. . . .152 

Soldiers- war of 1812 157 

Soldiers — civil war 160 

Sawin, Samuel 9, 30 

Sawin, Samuel, jr 30 

Sawin, Abijah 30 

Sanders, Jolin 48 

Sanders, "William 46, 69 

Sawtelle, Henry 44 

Sawtelle, iMedad 165 

Sawtelle, Kathan 165 

Simmons, John 74 

Simmons, Samuel 66 

Small, Dr. Wm. B 85 

Smith, Elisha 7, 9, 17 

Smith, John 47 

Smith, Caleb 48 

Snow, Dr. William 59, 85 

Soule, Rev. Joshua.61, 71, 114 
Soule, Nathan 72, 114 



Soule, Rev. Asbury 72 

Soule, Sumner 49, 75 

Soper, Nathaniel 17, 45 

Southard, Gideon 112 

Springer, Charles 75 

Stevens, Elijah 9 

Strickland, Hastings 37 

Strickland, John 37, 51 

Strickland, Isaac 

35, 37, 54, 73, 75 

Strickland, Samuel P 37 

Strickland, Hastings, jr.37, 51 

Strickland, Lee 37, 54, 75 

Strong 76 

Streeter, Barzillai 79 

Stetson, Rev. Seth 71 

Stoddard, Rev. Jeremlali.. 71 

Stevens, Rev. D. T 75 

Stevens, Rev. W. C 71 

Stone, Je.sse 

47, 73, 86, 87, 88, 111 

Stone, M. M 47, 87 

Stone, John S Ill 

TOLLAWALLA 13, 90, 113 

Tanners 47 

Traders 51 

Tornado 96 

Tramps and Oddities 115 

TiltOD, Tristram 28 

Timberlake, James 42 

Thompson, William 42, 69 

Thompson, Ii'a, and fam- 
ily 40,69 

Thompson, Ira D 44 

Thompson, Job Drew 44 

Towle, Ira 48 

True, Benjamin 41, 61 

Turner, Abial, and family 23 
Turner, N 75 

Universalist.s 72, 151 

Union Meeting House 75 

Valuation 43 

Vamum, Joseph B 58 



Vose, Rev. Ezekiel 75 

War, Civil, Town in the 63 

Winthrop 105, 106, 108 

Wild Beasts 108 

Walker, John 9, 88 

Walker, James 42, 69 

Walker, De.vter 87 

Washburn, Israel 21, 51 

Family of 52, 73, 84 

Washburn, Reuel.. . .59, 77, 86 

Family of 79 

Washburn, Davis 53 

Washburn, G. W. C 54 

Waters, Simeon.. 72, 73, 84, 86 

Family of . . . 48 

Waters, Clarendon 48, 74 

Waterhouse, Rev. Daniel.. 71 

Walton, Dea 113 

Weston, Rev. Jonas 112 

Wellington, Elijah, and 

family 36 

Wellington, Nathan 164 

Wellington, Rev. Elbridge 37 

Webber, Rev. George 71 

Whitman, David S 42 

White, John 39, 90 

White, Jedediah 88 

Williams, Leonard.. 6, 126, 127 

Williams, Elisha 

9, 16, 61, 64, 67 

Wing, Reuben 9, 21 

Wing, Thomas 45, 49 

Winslow, Benjamin 42 

AVood, Harry 77 

Woodward, Richard 6 

Woodman, Rev. Jabez..34, 73 
Woodbury, Bartholomew. 39 
Wyer, Josiah 7, 105 

Family of 17 

Wyman, Rev. Thomas 

66, 67, 69 
Wyman, William 40, 68 

Young, Le^i B 17 

Young, S. B 49 



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